Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > A phenol-contaminated groundwater site
View graph of relations

A phenol-contaminated groundwater site: A microbiological perspective

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

A phenol-contaminated groundwater site: A microbiological perspective. / Pickup, R. W.; Mallinson, H. E.H.; Rhodes, G. et al.
In: IAHS-AISH Proceedings and Reports, No. 275, 2002, p. 251-256.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Pickup, RW, Mallinson, HEH, Rhodes, G, Alamillo, ML, Thornton, SF & Lerner, DN 2002, 'A phenol-contaminated groundwater site: A microbiological perspective', IAHS-AISH Proceedings and Reports, no. 275, pp. 251-256. <https://iahs.info/uploads/dms/12358.44-pp251-256-Pickup--GQ47-.pdf>

APA

Pickup, R. W., Mallinson, H. E. H., Rhodes, G., Alamillo, M. L., Thornton, S. F., & Lerner, D. N. (2002). A phenol-contaminated groundwater site: A microbiological perspective. IAHS-AISH Proceedings and Reports, (275), 251-256. https://iahs.info/uploads/dms/12358.44-pp251-256-Pickup--GQ47-.pdf

Vancouver

Pickup RW, Mallinson HEH, Rhodes G, Alamillo ML, Thornton SF, Lerner DN. A phenol-contaminated groundwater site: A microbiological perspective. IAHS-AISH Proceedings and Reports. 2002;(275):251-256.

Author

Pickup, R. W. ; Mallinson, H. E.H. ; Rhodes, G. et al. / A phenol-contaminated groundwater site : A microbiological perspective. In: IAHS-AISH Proceedings and Reports. 2002 ; No. 275. pp. 251-256.

Bibtex

@article{c99556bab2de4fef921cc5155ed53231,
title = "A phenol-contaminated groundwater site: A microbiological perspective",
abstract = "The microbiology of groundwater, contaminated with phenol and other tar acids, was analysed using a range of bacteriological, biogeochemical process-related and molecular techniques and the data was used to assess the microbial biodegradative potential in a contaminated plume (Lerner et al., 2000). The contaminant plume front was shown to be 500 m from the pollutant source and moving at 10 m year-1. Two multilevel samplers (MLS) positioned in different regions within the plume (boreholes 59 and 60) were constructed (Thornton et al., 2001). Activity of the microbial community, as represented by phenol degradation potential and ability to utilise a range of substrates, was found to be influenced by the plume contaminant concentration. The highest phenol concentrations were shown to depress bacterial numbers, in some areas to <10 cells per ml (Pickup et al., 2001). In both MLS, bacterial groups or biogeochemical processes (e.g. methanogenesis, sulphate reduction and denitrification) often associated with anaerobic degradation of contaminants were identified (Pickup et al., 2001). Microbial activity measurements, combined with chemical analyses and hydrological data, allowed an assessment of the effects of the contaminant plume on the groundwater microbiology which could, in turn, be related to the potential for natural attenuation of the site (Pickup et al., 2001).",
keywords = "Microbial ecology, Natural attenuation, Phenol",
author = "Pickup, {R. W.} and Mallinson, {H. E.H.} and G. Rhodes and Alamillo, {M. L.} and Thornton, {S. F.} and Lerner, {D. N.}",
year = "2002",
language = "English",
pages = "251--256",
journal = "IAHS-AISH Proceedings and Reports",
issn = "0144-7815",
number = "275",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A phenol-contaminated groundwater site

T2 - A microbiological perspective

AU - Pickup, R. W.

AU - Mallinson, H. E.H.

AU - Rhodes, G.

AU - Alamillo, M. L.

AU - Thornton, S. F.

AU - Lerner, D. N.

PY - 2002

Y1 - 2002

N2 - The microbiology of groundwater, contaminated with phenol and other tar acids, was analysed using a range of bacteriological, biogeochemical process-related and molecular techniques and the data was used to assess the microbial biodegradative potential in a contaminated plume (Lerner et al., 2000). The contaminant plume front was shown to be 500 m from the pollutant source and moving at 10 m year-1. Two multilevel samplers (MLS) positioned in different regions within the plume (boreholes 59 and 60) were constructed (Thornton et al., 2001). Activity of the microbial community, as represented by phenol degradation potential and ability to utilise a range of substrates, was found to be influenced by the plume contaminant concentration. The highest phenol concentrations were shown to depress bacterial numbers, in some areas to <10 cells per ml (Pickup et al., 2001). In both MLS, bacterial groups or biogeochemical processes (e.g. methanogenesis, sulphate reduction and denitrification) often associated with anaerobic degradation of contaminants were identified (Pickup et al., 2001). Microbial activity measurements, combined with chemical analyses and hydrological data, allowed an assessment of the effects of the contaminant plume on the groundwater microbiology which could, in turn, be related to the potential for natural attenuation of the site (Pickup et al., 2001).

AB - The microbiology of groundwater, contaminated with phenol and other tar acids, was analysed using a range of bacteriological, biogeochemical process-related and molecular techniques and the data was used to assess the microbial biodegradative potential in a contaminated plume (Lerner et al., 2000). The contaminant plume front was shown to be 500 m from the pollutant source and moving at 10 m year-1. Two multilevel samplers (MLS) positioned in different regions within the plume (boreholes 59 and 60) were constructed (Thornton et al., 2001). Activity of the microbial community, as represented by phenol degradation potential and ability to utilise a range of substrates, was found to be influenced by the plume contaminant concentration. The highest phenol concentrations were shown to depress bacterial numbers, in some areas to <10 cells per ml (Pickup et al., 2001). In both MLS, bacterial groups or biogeochemical processes (e.g. methanogenesis, sulphate reduction and denitrification) often associated with anaerobic degradation of contaminants were identified (Pickup et al., 2001). Microbial activity measurements, combined with chemical analyses and hydrological data, allowed an assessment of the effects of the contaminant plume on the groundwater microbiology which could, in turn, be related to the potential for natural attenuation of the site (Pickup et al., 2001).

KW - Microbial ecology

KW - Natural attenuation

KW - Phenol

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:0036376480

SP - 251

EP - 256

JO - IAHS-AISH Proceedings and Reports

JF - IAHS-AISH Proceedings and Reports

SN - 0144-7815

IS - 275

ER -