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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Glyphosate degradation by immobilized bacteria: field studies with industrial wastewater effluent.

TLDR
The results suggest that full-scale use of immobilized bacteria can be a cost-effective and dependable technique for the biotreatment of industrial wastewater.
Abstract
Immobilized bacteria have been shown in the laboratory to effectively remove glyphosate from wastewater effluent discharged from an activated sludge treatment system. Bacterial consortia in lab columns maintained a 99% glyphosate-degrading activity (GDA) at a hydraulic residence time of less than 20 min. In this study, a pilot plant (capacity, 45 liters/min) was used for a field demonstration. Initially, activated sludge was enriched for microbes with GDA during a 3-week biocarrier activation period. Wastewater effluent was then spiked with glyphosate and NH4Cl and recycled through the pilot plant column during start-up. Microbes with GDA were enhanced by maintaining the pH at less than 8 and adding yeast extract (less than 10 mg/liter). Once the consortia were stabilized, the column capacity for glyphosate removal was determined in a 60-day continuous-flow study. Waste containing 50 mg of glyphosate per liter was pumped at increasing flow rates until a steady state was reached. A microbial GDA of greater than 90% was achieved at a 10-min hydraulic residence time (144 hydraulic turnovers per day). Additional studies showed that microbes with GDA were recoverable within (i) 5 days of an acid shock and (ii) 3 days after a 21-day dormancy (low-flow, low-maintenance) mode. These results suggest that full-scale use of immobilized bacteria can be a cost-effective and dependable technique for the biotreatment of industrial wastewater.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental applications of immobilized microbial cells: A review

TL;DR: A review examines many of the scientific and technical aspects involved in using immobilized microbial cells in environmental applications, with a particular focus on cells encapsulated in biopolymer gels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immobilization of microbial cells: A promising tool for treatment of toxic pollutants in industrial wastewater

TL;DR: The potential of immobilized microbial cells for treatment of toxic pollutants in industrial wastewater, the fundamentals, history and advantages of immobilizing cells compared with suspended cells, characteristics of support materials and the principal methods of immobilization are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial degradation of glyphosate herbicides (Review)

TL;DR: Since the problem of purifying glyphosate-contaminated soils and water bodies is a topical issue, the possibilities of applying glyphosate-degrading bacteria for their bioremediation are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relevance of urban glyphosate use for surface water quality.

TL;DR: Comparisons of the agricultural application and the seasonal concentration and load pattern in the main creek from March to November revealed that the occurrence of glyphosate cannot be explained by agricultural use only and more than half of the load during selected rain events originates from urban areas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial metabolism of sulfur- and phosphorus-containing xenobiotics

TL;DR: Observations at the protein level in a number of bacteria suggest that a regulatory system is present which responds to sulfate limitation and controls the synthesis of proteins involved in providing sulfur to the cell and which may reveal analogies between the regulation of phosphorus and sulfur metabolism.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Glyphosate-Degrading Microorganisms from Industrial Activated Sludge

TL;DR: A plating medium was developed to isolate N-phosphonomethylglycine (glyphosate)-degrading microorganisms, with glyphosate as the sole phosphorus source and this microorganism has been identified as a Flavobacterium species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphonate utilization by bacteria

TL;DR: One isolate, identified as Pseudomonas putida, grew with AEP as its sole carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus source and released nearly all of the organic phosphorus as orthophosphate and 72% of the AEP nitrogen as ammonium, the first demonstration of utilization of a phosphonoalkyl moiety as a sole carbon source.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of microbial traits associated with glyphosate biodegradation in industrial activated sludge

TL;DR: GDA was found in only a small portion of the industrial clusters and did not correlate with any other characteristic tested, even though the GDA strains had a large phenotypic diversity, suggesting that GDA is not a universal trait and its expression requires enrichment through specific selective pressures.
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