Bioremediation of contaminated urban river sediment with methanol stimulation: Metabolic processes accompanied with microbial community changes

2019 
Abstract The intense pollution of urban river sediments with rapid urbanization has attracted considerable attention. Complex contaminated sediments urgently need to be remediated to conserve the ecological functions of impacted rivers. This study investigated the effect of using methanol as a co-substrate on the stimulation of the indigenous microbial consortium to enhance the bioremediation of petroleum hydrocarbons (PHs) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in an urban river sediment. After 65 days of treatment, the PAHs degradation efficiencies in the sediment adding methanol were 4.87%–40.3% higher than the control. The removal rate constant of C31 was 0.0749 d −1 with 100 mM of supplied methanol, while the corresponding rate was 0.0399 d −1 in the control. Four-ring PAHs were effectively removed at a degradation efficiency of 65%–69.8%, increased by 43.3% compared with the control. Sulfate reduction and methanogenesis activity were detected, and methane-producing archaea (such as Methanomethylovorans , with a relative abundance of 25.87%–58.53%) and the sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB, such as Desulfobulbus and Desulfobacca ) were enriched. In addition, the chemolithoautotrophic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (SOB, such as Sulfuricurvum , with a relative abundance of 34%–39.2%) were predominant after the depletion of total organic carbon (TOC), and markedly positively correlated with the PHs and PAHs degradation efficiencies ( P Dechloromonas ) were also obviously enriched and significantly positively correlated with the TOC concentration after methanol injection ( P
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