editor.ajphr@gmail.com
9409046853
e-ISSN: 2321-3647
logo

American Journal of Pharmacy and Health Research

Published

Isolation of microorganisms from petroleum contaminated soil and its effect on degradation of polythene bag and plastic cup.

Published in August 2014 Issue 8 (Vol. 2, Issue 8, 2014)

Isolation of microorganisms from petroleum contaminated soil and its effect on degradation of polythene bag and plastic cup. - Issue cover

Abstract

Plastic waste accumulation is still an increasing problem all over the world. In this view, the biodegradation of polythene bag and plastic cup (both in native and in-vitro conditions) by various group of microorganisms isolated from petroleum contaminated soil is investigated. Five bacterial strains, five fungal strains and five Actinomycetes strains were isolated and identified biochemically.  In native conditions, at the end of 6th month, the degradation percentage of plastic was noted as 2.37±0.25% in petroleum contaminated soil and in normal soil as 1.70±0.20% and polythene samples got degraded up to 4.60±0.34% in petroleum contaminated soil and 3.33±0.20% in normal soil. In in-vitro condition, among the five bacterial organisms, Pseudomonas aeruginosa showed highest degradation percentage of both plastic cup (1.34%) and polythene (26.7%). Among the five fungal organisms, Aspergillus niger showed highest degradation percentage of both plastic cup (8.13%) and polythene (32.4%). Among the five Actinomycete sp, Actinomycete sp.1 showed highest degradation percentage of both plastic cup (11.3%) and polythene (34.9%). On comparing to all organisms, Actinomycete strain 1 showed highest degradation percentage. The 16S rRNA gene sequencing revealed it as Streptomyces clavuligerus MTCC 7037. It may be concluded from this work that the petroleum contaminated soil sample is a good source of microbes capable of degrading plastic cup and polythene bag.

Authors (2)

Nirmala . P

Post Graduate and Research Dep...

View all publications →

Harini . C

Post Graduate and Research Dep...

View all publications →

Download Article

PDF

Best for printing and citation

File size: 0.0 MB
Format: PDF

Download Article

PDF

Best for printing and citation

File size: 0.0 MB
Format: PDF

Article Information

AJPHR208012

AJPHR-01-000187

2014-08-01

Article Impact

Views:4,740
Downloads:1,697

How to Cite

., N., & ., H. (2014). Isolation of microorganisms from petroleum contaminated soil and its effect on degradation of polythene bag and plastic cup.. American Journal of Pharmacy and Health Research, 2(8), xx-xx. https://ajphr.com/articles/AJPHR208012

Article Actions

Whatsapp