Reductive dechlorination of polychlorinated biphenyls by anaerobic microorganisms from sediments. 1988

J F Quensen, and J M Tiedje, and S A Boyd

Microorganisms from Hudson River sediments reductively dechlorinated most polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in Aroclor 1242 under anaerobic conditions, thus demonstrating PCB dechlorination by anaerobic bacteria in the laboratory. The most rapid dechlorination was observed at the highest PCB concentration used; at 700 parts per million Aroclor, 53 percent of the total chlorine was removed in 16 weeks, and the proportion of mono- and dichlorobiphenyls increased from 9 to 88 percent. Dechlorination occurred primarily from the meta and para positions; congeners that were substituted only in the ortho position (or positions) accumulated. These dechlorination products are both less toxic and more readily degraded by aerobic bacteria. These results indicate that reductive dechlorination may be an important environmental fate of PCBs, and suggest that a sequential anaerobic-aerobic biological treatment system for PCBs may be feasible.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

J F Quensen, and J M Tiedje, and S A Boyd
July 1996, Applied and environmental microbiology,
J F Quensen, and J M Tiedje, and S A Boyd
November 1994, Environmental science & technology,
J F Quensen, and J M Tiedje, and S A Boyd
May 1991, Applied and environmental microbiology,
J F Quensen, and J M Tiedje, and S A Boyd
August 2012, Chemosphere,
J F Quensen, and J M Tiedje, and S A Boyd
September 2001, Chemosphere,
J F Quensen, and J M Tiedje, and S A Boyd
July 2006, Water environment research : a research publication of the Water Environment Federation,
J F Quensen, and J M Tiedje, and S A Boyd
May 2019, The Science of the total environment,
J F Quensen, and J M Tiedje, and S A Boyd
April 2005, Journal of microbiology (Seoul, Korea),
J F Quensen, and J M Tiedje, and S A Boyd
October 1988, Ecotoxicology and environmental safety,
Copied contents to your clipboard!