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  4. Mineralization of 2,4- and 2,6-dinitrotoluene in soil slurries
 
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1999
Journal Article
Title

Mineralization of 2,4- and 2,6-dinitrotoluene in soil slurries

Abstract
DNT-degrading bacteria can completely degrade mixtures of DNT in liquid cultures without the production of aminonitrotoluenes. We determined whether specific DNT-degrading isolates could also degrade DNT from contaminated soil in the presence of indigenous microbial communities. When 2,4-DNT- and 2,6-DNT-degrading strains were added to a mixture of 2,4-DNT and 2,6-DNT in a soil slurry, disappearance of DNT was accompanied by 14.CO2 release and stoichiometric appearance of nitrite. When soil historically contaminated with mixed DNT isomers was used in slurries, the combination of DNT-degrading strains removed all of the DNT from the aqueous phase and over 99 per cent of the initial DNT. Traces of extractable DNT remained associated with the soil; however, the toxicity of the treated soil was low. After an extended acclimation period, the 2,4-DNT, and, much later, the 2,6-DNT, was degraded in the uninocutated control. The results show that aged DNT contamination can be removed effectivel y from soil. The addition of specific DNT-mineralizing bacteria dramatically enhances the mineralization of DNT in soil slurries. Native bacteria do not convert DNT to aminonitro-toluenes during the short incubation times required for mineralization of DNT.
Author(s)
Nishino, S.F.
Spain, J.C.
Lenke, H.  
Knackmuss, H.-J.  
Journal
Environmental science and technology  
DOI
10.1021/es9808301
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Grenzflächen- und Bioverfahrenstechnik IGB  
Keyword(s)
  • 2,4-DNT

  • 2,6-DNT

  • biodegradation

  • soil

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