Sulphate-reducing bacterial diversity in a calcareous sandy sediment of Mallorca and community response to hydrocarbon contamination

  1. Suárez Suárez, Ana Belén
Supervised by:
  1. Ramon Rosselló Mora Director
  2. Elena Isabel García-Valdés Pukkits Director
  3. Antonio Tovar Sánchez Director

Defence university: Universitat de les Illes Balears

Fecha de defensa: 25 July 2012

Committee:
  1. Rudolf Amann Chair
  2. Rafael Bosch Zaragoza Secretary
  3. Magdalena Grifoll Ruiz Committee member
  4. Silvia Marqués Martín Committee member
  5. Josefa Antón Botella Committee member

Type: Thesis

Abstract

This thesis discusses the fate and behave of crude oil contamination in the Mediterranean coastal ecosystem, and the essential role of the marine sediments in the regulation and maintenance of biogeochemical processes. The study pays particular attention to the role of sulphate reducing bacterial communities in the degradation of organic matter and pollutants entering the Mediterranean environment. A polyphasic approach based in the combination of in situ and in vitro experiments, next generation and classical molecular biology, cultivation, and the determination of metabolic activities, provided first insights into the diversity, abundance and physiology of sulphate reducing bacteria inhabiting the undisturbed sandy sediment at the north of Mallorca (Balearic Islands). The results obtained during the thesis demonstrate that the undisturbed Mediterranean sediment harbours an autochthonous microbiota that could prosper after a crude oil spill and which role might be crucial for the transformation and removal of hazardous organic compounds in this environment.