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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Bioremediation of the pesticides dieldrin, simazine, trifluralin using tropical and temperate white-rot fungi

Elyassi, Ali January 1997 (has links)
The natural breakdown of three pesticides on the UK Red List (dieldrin, simazine and trifluralin) in water and soil varied with environmental conditions. In both sterile and unsterile water, trifluralin was degraded to some extent at 20 and 30°C. In contrast, dieldrin and simazine were stable over the 42 days incubation period. A gradient HPLC method was developed for the simultaneous quantification of the three pesticides in soil. In field capacity soil mixtures of the three pesticides (5 and 10 ppm) showed a similar stability with limited degradation at 20°C but increased rates of degradation at 30°C. At the higher concentration the pesticides naturally degraded at a slower rate. Simazine and trifluralin degradation was significantly enhanced with increasing temperature from 20 to 30°C. Water potential (field capacity~ -0.065 MPa~ and - 0.28 MPa) had little effect on the natural breakdown rate of dieldrin. Simazine showed a greater breakdown in the mid-wetness soil~ while trifluralin was degraded rapidly in the field capacity soil, but not at all in the driest treatment over the 70 day experimental period. In vitro studies on solid agar media overlayed with cellophane showed that of four fungi examined~ Trametes cingulata, Trametes socotrana (tropical species) and Phanerochaete chrysosporium and Polystictus versicolor (temperate species) all except P.chrysosporium were able to grow in the presence of 5 ppm of any of the three pesticides at 20 and 30°C, with the latter only growing at 30°C. At 10 ppm concentration P. chrysosporium did not grow, regardless of temperature or time of incubation (up to 56 days). HPLC was used to quantify the temporal rates of degradation in the solid agar media and this showed that P. versicolor and T. socotrana were very effective at breaking down the three pesticides, at 20 and 30°C. The chosen fungi were grown on chopped straw as a carrier and incorporated into soil microcosms in the ratio of 1:10 containing mixtures of the three pesticides (5, 10 ppm) at 20 and 30°C, and subsequently under different water potential regimes at 20°C only, over periods of 70 days. P. versicolor alone significantly increased breakdown of 5 ppm dieldrin by 26% over untreated controls, while simazine breakdown was increased by 16%. However, for simazine at 30°C there was no difference between temporal rates of natural breakdown and those containing fungal inocula, regardless of concentration. With 5 ppm trifluralin, a maximum breakdown in untreated soil was 67% after 70 days. By contras~ this pesticide was undetectable after 28 days in the presence of the inoculant P . versicolor. This increased to 42 days where a mixture of the two fungi were used. Generally the mixture of fungi used in this study were not as effective in bioremediation of these pesticides as a single species. Field capacity soil appeared to be the best condition for P. versicolor to degrade dieldrin and trifluralin added at 10 ppm. However, for simazine this occurred in the driest water potential (-0.28 MPa) used.

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