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Relationship between biodegradation rate and percentage of a compound that becomes sequestered in soil
Cited 32 time in
Web of Science
Cited 32 time in Scopus
- Authors
- Issue Date
- 2001-05
- Publisher
- Pergamon Press Ltd.
- Citation
- Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Vol.33 No.6, pp.787-792
- Abstract
- A study was conducted to determine whether the rate of biodegradation of phenanthrene determines the extent of its sequestration.
Samples of a single soil type with different biodegradative activities were used. Various rates of biodegradation were obtained by use of different incubation temperatures, adding a bacterial culture or both. Much of the compound became biologically unavailable (sequestered) when the initial rates of biodegradation were slow, and little remained if the soil had high degradative activity. A portion of the compound remaining in soils with previously low activity was degraded if the soil samples were reinoculated and incubated under favorable conditions, but a significant amount of the compound was still microbiologically unavailable. The data show that the percentage of a compound that will be sequestered in a microbiologically unavailable form is determined by the initial rate of its biodegradation in soil.
- ISSN
- 0038-0717
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