Alternative methodology for isolation of biosurfactant-producing bacteria.


Journal article


N. Krepsky, F. S. da Silva, L. Fontana, M. Crapez
Brazilian journal of biology = Revista brasleira de biologia, 2007

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Krepsky, N., da Silva, F. S., Fontana, L., & Crapez, M. (2007). Alternative methodology for isolation of biosurfactant-producing bacteria. Brazilian Journal of Biology = Revista Brasleira De Biologia.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Krepsky, N., F. S. da Silva, L. Fontana, and M. Crapez. “Alternative Methodology for Isolation of Biosurfactant-Producing Bacteria.” Brazilian journal of biology = Revista brasleira de biologia (2007).


MLA   Click to copy
Krepsky, N., et al. “Alternative Methodology for Isolation of Biosurfactant-Producing Bacteria.” Brazilian Journal of Biology = Revista Brasleira De Biologia, 2007.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{n2007a,
  title = {Alternative methodology for isolation of biosurfactant-producing bacteria.},
  year = {2007},
  journal = {Brazilian journal of biology = Revista brasleira de biologia},
  author = {Krepsky, N. and da Silva, F. S. and Fontana, L. and Crapez, M.}
}

Abstract

Wide biosurfactant application on biorremediation is limited by its high production cost. The search for cheaper biossurfactant production alternatives has guided our study. The use of selective media containing sucrose (10 g x L(-1)) and Arabian Light oil (2 g x L(-1)) as carbon sources showed to be effective to screen and maintain biosurfactant-producing consortia isolated from mangrove hydrocarbon-contaminated sediment. The biosurfactant production was assayed by kerosene, gasoline and Arabian Light Emulsification activity and the bacterial growth curve was determined by bacterial quantification. The parameters analyzed for biosurfactant production were the growth curve, salinity concentration, flask shape and oxygenation. All bacteria consortia screened were able to emulsify the petroleum derivatives tested. Biosurfactant production increased according to the incubation time; however the type of emulsification (non-aqueous phase or aqueous phase) did not change with time but with the compound tested. The methodology was able to isolate biosurfactant-producing consortia from superficial mangrove sediment contaminated by petroleum hydrocarbons and was recommended for selection of biosurfactant producing bacteria in tropical countries with low financial resources.


Share



Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in