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Ganiyu Oladunjoye Oyetibo

Researcher at University of Lagos

Publications -  36
Citations -  866

Ganiyu Oladunjoye Oyetibo is an academic researcher from University of Lagos. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 30 publications receiving 666 citations. Previous affiliations of Ganiyu Oladunjoye Oyetibo include Tohoku Gakuin University.

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Degradation of hydrocarbons and biosurfactant production by Pseudomonas sp. strain LP1

TL;DR: Pseudomonas sp. strain LP1, an organism isolated on the basis of its ability to grow on pyrene, was assayed for its degradative and biosurfactant production potentials when growing on crude, diesel and engine oils as mentioned in this paper.
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Bacteria with dual resistance to elevated concentrations of heavy metals and antibiotics in Nigerian contaminated systems.

TL;DR: Dual expressions of antibiotics and heavy-metal resistance make the isolates, potential seeds for decommissioning of sites polluted with industrial effluents rich in heavy metals, since the bacteria will be able to withstand in situ antibiosis that may prevail in such ecosystems.
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Pyrene-degradation potentials of Pseudomonas species isolated from polluted tropical soils

TL;DR: Three Pseudomonas species isolated from oil polluted soils in Lagos, Nigeria were studied for their pyrene degradation potentials, making this the first report of pyrene-degraders from the sub-Saharan African environment.
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Differential degradation of crude oil (Bonny Light) by four Pseudomonas strains.

TL;DR: Four hydrocarbon degraders isolated from enriched oil- and asphalt-contaminated soils in Lagos, Nigeria, were tested for their petroleum degradation potentials and near-disappearance of major peaks (including aliphatics and aromatics) in the hydrocarbon mixture was confirmed.
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Biotechnological remedies for the estuarine environment polluted with heavy metals and persistent organic pollutants

TL;DR: The concept of bioremediation involves the use of competent biological elements such as microorganisms and plants, along with or without the biomolecules they produced, to ameliorate pollution as discussed by the authors.