WASHINGTON (Associated Press) - An industrial chemical that
pollutes groundwater and has resisted cleanup can be
neutralized by an obscure microbe that researchers have discovered
in the Hudson River bottom mud.
In a study appearing in the journal Science, researchers at
Michigan State University report a previously unknown bacteria is
able to turn trichloroethane, an industrial chemical that is
difficult to clear from groundwater, into a more benign compound
that other microbes can render harmless.
Benjamin M. Griffin, a Michigan State researcher and a coauthor of
the study, said the microbe reduces trichloroethane through
respiration to chloroethane, a compound that is more easily
cleared from groundwater. "This microbe thrives in the
presence of TCA (trichloroethane)," Griffin said. In
laboratory experiments, he said, the microbe is grown by adding
TCA to its culture medium.
The microbe lives without oxygen, which means it could be useful
for cleaning TCA from aquifers and groundwater where the chemical
is a common pollutant, said Griffin. TCA is present in 696
of 1,430 cleanup priority sites identified by the Environmental
Protection Agency. The chemical is used as an industrial
solvent.
"TCA was one of the remaining groundwater pollutants for
which biodegradation has not been resolved," James Tedjie,
the senior author of the study, said in in a statement. "Till
now, there wasn't good evidence there was a biodegradable
solution."
John Dull, a toxicologist at the University of Kansas who was not
involved in the research said that "any mechanism that can
clean up residues and solvents is helpful and
significant." He noted, however, that TCA is not
considered as environmentally troublesome as tetrachloroethene or
trichloroethene, two other industrial chemicals often found in
groundwater. |