pdf    12

Keywords

Bioremediation
Degradation
Starch
Green gram
Maize

Categories

How to Cite

Hemamaline PA, & Raajamurugan S. (2024). Experimental Study on Bioremediation of Sago Industry Effluent and its Impact on Seed Germination. Scientific Hub of Applied Research in Engineering & Information Technology, 4(4), 1–5. https://doi.org/10.53659/shareit.v4i4.50

Abstract

In this study, there are two investigational systems: one is treatment of sago industry effluent by aerobic bacterial consortium and the other is impact of treated and untreated effluent on seed germination. For the treatment system, the starch degrading bacteria were isolated from sago industry effluent and effluent contaminated soil. The genera, Alcaligenes, Bacillus and Corynebacterium were found efficient in starch degradation. The selected isolates were tested for their efficiency on the degradation of starch both in Mineral Salts Medium (MSM) and in sago industry effluent. About 85% of bacterial consortium composed of Alcaligenes, Bacillus and Corynebacterium, whereas in effluent the degradation of starch was only 63%. The physico-chemical properties such as electrical conductivity, total solids, suspended solids, dissolved solids, BOD, COD, nitrogen and phosphate were found decreased in effluent after 72 h. The pH of the effluent was relatively increased from 3 to 6.7. The study of seed germination (maize and green gram) was carried out at 25, 50, 75 and 100% concentrations of treated and untreated effluent using soil sowing method. Shoot length, root length, fresh weight, dry weight and chlorophyll content showed an increase when treated effluent was tested whereas a decrease of growth was noticed in untreated effluent tested seedlings. The results revealed that effluent treated by aerobic microorganisms has no negative
impact on the seed germination and can be effectively used for irrigation.

https://doi.org/10.53659/shareit.v4i4.50
  
   pdf    12
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Copyright (c) 2024 Scientific Hub of Applied Research in Engineering & Information Technology

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Citations