Bioremediation Potential Assessment of Plant Growth-Promoting Autochthonous Bacteria: a Lignite Mine Case Study
2016
Authors
Hamidović, SaudTeodorović, Smilja
Lalević, Blazo
Jovičić-Petrović, Jelena
Jović, Jelena
Kiković, Dragan
Raičević, Vera
Article (Published version)
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Coal and lignite play a major energy supply role in many European countries, including Bosnia and Herzegovina. Yet mining activities are a heavy source of ecosystem contamination, posing significant environmental threats. The primary goal of this study was to isolate and identify autochthonous lignite mine spoil bacteria and evaluate their potential in bioremediation of these polluted soils. Two Bacillus species, Bacillus simplex and a Bacillus cereus group member, were identified using conventional, molecular, and bioinformatics approaches. This represents, to our knowledge, the first microbial characterization of mine overburden in Bosnia and Herzegovina. A co-inoculum of autochthonous bacterial populations was used to treat unvegetated as well as oat- and lettuce-vegetated lignite overburden samples. Our results illustrate the potential of recovered native species to enrich soil fertility and productivity through plant growth promotion.
Keywords:
Bacillus spp. / soil / bioremediation / lignite spoilSource:
Polish journal of environmental studies, 2016, 25, 1, 113-119Publisher:
- Hard, Olsztyn 5
Funding / projects:
- Biodiversity as potential in ecoremediation technologies of degraded ecosystems (RS-MESTD-Technological Development (TD or TR)-31080)
- Inovation of Forensic Methods and their Application (RS-MESTD-Technological Development (TD or TR)-34019)
- Agrobiodiversity and land-use change in Serbia: an integrated biodiversity assessment of key functional groups of arthropods and plant pathogens (RS-MESTD-Integrated and Interdisciplinary Research (IIR or III)-43001)
- Advancing research in agricultural and food sciences at Faculty of Agriculture, University of Belgrade (EU-FP7-316004)
DOI: 10.15244/pjoes/59465
ISSN: 1230-1485
WoS: 000369561700012
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84985995305
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Institution/Community
JakovTY - JOUR AU - Hamidović, Saud AU - Teodorović, Smilja AU - Lalević, Blazo AU - Jovičić-Petrović, Jelena AU - Jović, Jelena AU - Kiković, Dragan AU - Raičević, Vera PY - 2016 UR - http://jakov.kpu.edu.rs/handle/123456789/730 AB - Coal and lignite play a major energy supply role in many European countries, including Bosnia and Herzegovina. Yet mining activities are a heavy source of ecosystem contamination, posing significant environmental threats. The primary goal of this study was to isolate and identify autochthonous lignite mine spoil bacteria and evaluate their potential in bioremediation of these polluted soils. Two Bacillus species, Bacillus simplex and a Bacillus cereus group member, were identified using conventional, molecular, and bioinformatics approaches. This represents, to our knowledge, the first microbial characterization of mine overburden in Bosnia and Herzegovina. A co-inoculum of autochthonous bacterial populations was used to treat unvegetated as well as oat- and lettuce-vegetated lignite overburden samples. Our results illustrate the potential of recovered native species to enrich soil fertility and productivity through plant growth promotion. PB - Hard, Olsztyn 5 T2 - Polish journal of environmental studies T1 - Bioremediation Potential Assessment of Plant Growth-Promoting Autochthonous Bacteria: a Lignite Mine Case Study VL - 25 IS - 1 SP - 113 EP - 119 DO - 10.15244/pjoes/59465 ER -
@article{ author = "Hamidović, Saud and Teodorović, Smilja and Lalević, Blazo and Jovičić-Petrović, Jelena and Jović, Jelena and Kiković, Dragan and Raičević, Vera", year = "2016", abstract = "Coal and lignite play a major energy supply role in many European countries, including Bosnia and Herzegovina. Yet mining activities are a heavy source of ecosystem contamination, posing significant environmental threats. The primary goal of this study was to isolate and identify autochthonous lignite mine spoil bacteria and evaluate their potential in bioremediation of these polluted soils. Two Bacillus species, Bacillus simplex and a Bacillus cereus group member, were identified using conventional, molecular, and bioinformatics approaches. This represents, to our knowledge, the first microbial characterization of mine overburden in Bosnia and Herzegovina. A co-inoculum of autochthonous bacterial populations was used to treat unvegetated as well as oat- and lettuce-vegetated lignite overburden samples. Our results illustrate the potential of recovered native species to enrich soil fertility and productivity through plant growth promotion.", publisher = "Hard, Olsztyn 5", journal = "Polish journal of environmental studies", title = "Bioremediation Potential Assessment of Plant Growth-Promoting Autochthonous Bacteria: a Lignite Mine Case Study", volume = "25", number = "1", pages = "113-119", doi = "10.15244/pjoes/59465" }
Hamidović, S., Teodorović, S., Lalević, B., Jovičić-Petrović, J., Jović, J., Kiković, D.,& Raičević, V.. (2016). Bioremediation Potential Assessment of Plant Growth-Promoting Autochthonous Bacteria: a Lignite Mine Case Study. in Polish journal of environmental studies Hard, Olsztyn 5., 25(1), 113-119. https://doi.org/10.15244/pjoes/59465
Hamidović S, Teodorović S, Lalević B, Jovičić-Petrović J, Jović J, Kiković D, Raičević V. Bioremediation Potential Assessment of Plant Growth-Promoting Autochthonous Bacteria: a Lignite Mine Case Study. in Polish journal of environmental studies. 2016;25(1):113-119. doi:10.15244/pjoes/59465 .
Hamidović, Saud, Teodorović, Smilja, Lalević, Blazo, Jovičić-Petrović, Jelena, Jović, Jelena, Kiković, Dragan, Raičević, Vera, "Bioremediation Potential Assessment of Plant Growth-Promoting Autochthonous Bacteria: a Lignite Mine Case Study" in Polish journal of environmental studies, 25, no. 1 (2016):113-119, https://doi.org/10.15244/pjoes/59465 . .