RESUMO
Oil-polluted sediment bioremediation depends on both physicochemical and biological parameters, but the effect of the latter cannot be evaluated without the optimization of the former. We aimed in optimizing the physicochemical parameters related to biodegradation by applying an ex-situ landfarming set-up combined with biostimulation to oil-polluted sediment, in order to determine the added effect of bioaugmentation by four allochthonous oil-degrading bacterial consortia in relation to the degradation efficiency of the indigenous community. We monitored hydrocarbon degradation, sediment ecotoxicity and hydrolytic activity, bacterial population sizes and bacterial community dynamics, characterizing the dominant taxa through time and at each treatment. We observed no significant differences in total degradation, but increased ecotoxicity between the different treatments receiving both biostimulation and bioaugmentation and the biostimulated-only control. Moreover, the added allochthonous bacteria quickly perished and were rarely detected, their addition inducing minimal shifts in community structure although it altered the distribution of the residual hydrocarbons in two treatments. Therefore, we concluded that biodegradation was mostly performed by the autochthonous populations while bioaugmentation, in contrast to biostimulation, did not enhance the remediation process. Our results indicate that when environmental conditions are optimized, the indigenous microbiome at a polluted site will likely outperform any allochthonous consortium.
Assuntos
Consórcios Microbianos , Poluição por Petróleo , Petróleo/metabolismo , Animais , Biodegradação Ambiental , Hidrólise , Paracentrotus , Petróleo/toxicidade , Testes de Toxicidade , VibrioRESUMO
Chlamydia Trachomatis is one of the most frequently bound aetiological agents in acute salpingitis. Chlamydia infection often runs asymptomatically or with slight symptomatology, so patients do not call in their doctor. This hypothesis is backed by the observation that serum antibody positivity for Chlamydia and tubal infertility are often found together. The purpose of the present study was to determine the positivity of serum antibodies for Chlamydia in infertile women observed at this Centre and compare it with a control group of non-sterile patients. Further, in those patients in whom antibody positivity exists, it was also proposed to seek tubal lesions at hysterosalpingography or coelioscopy. The antibody titre in infertile women is compared with that of the control group. The study was carried out in 30 sterile women and in 30 patients in the definitely fertile control group. The "Ipazyme" (Sorin) immunoperoxidase test was used to seek IgG and IgA anti-Chlamydia antibodies. The geometric mean of the antibody titre was calculated in those women with a titre equal to or greater than 64 for IgG antibodies and equal to or greater than 16 for IgA antibodies. It is now intended to study whether the titre is higher in infertile women compared to the control group and if positivity is more significant in these patients.