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Biodegradation of biodiesel-oil by Cellulosimicrobium sp. Isolated from Colombian Caribbean soils

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-12-31, 12:13 authored by Angela Bertel-Sevilla, Leonor Cervantes-Ceballos, Irina Tirado-Ballestas, Wilson Maldonado-Rojas, Juan Alzate-Restrepo, Jesus Olivero-Verbel

Biodiesel is considered to be a natural substitute for fossil fuel. The comparatively low toxicity of biodiesel and its susceptibility to microbial biodegradation could reduce its environmental impact. Currently, biodiesel is sold previously mixed with petroleum-based hydrocarbons. The aim of this work was to measure the biodegradation potential of commercially available biodiesel, using bacterial strains (BBCOL-001, BBCOL-002, and BBCOL-003) isolated from a tropical forest soils in the Colombian Caribbean. According to nucleotide sequencing of the gene encoding for 16S rRNA, the strains belong to members of the genus Cellulosimicrobium. GC–MS analysis showed that biodiesel-oil alkanes were degraded by an average of 81.5% with optical density reaching 0.2–0.3 in minimal salt media at 37°C for 5 days. Individual diesel-oil alkanes were degraded by the strains at rates between 64.9% to 100%. The increase in bacterial biomass confirmed the use of the substrates by the microorganisms, suggesting these hydrocarbons are a carbon source. Changes in the biochemical behaviour of the strains suggested their capacity to adapt to environmental conditions might be an important resource for bioremediation.

Funding

The authors gratefully acknowledge Colciencias - University of Cartagena (grant number RC-758-2011/1107-521-29360), Vice-Presidency for Research at the University of Cartagena (Research Group Support Program, 2011-2013), Cartagena, Colombia.

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