2009
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-009-0121-9
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AhR agonist and genotoxicant bioavailability in a PAH-contaminated soil undergoing biological treatment

Abstract: It has to be ensured that soft remediation methods like biodegradation or the natural remediation approach do not result in the mobilization of toxic compounds including more mobile degradation products. For PAH-contaminated sites this cannot be assured merely by monitoring the 16 target PAHs. The combined use of a battery of biotests for different types of PAH effects such as the CALUX and the Comet assay together with bioavailability extraction methods may be a useful screening tool of bioremediation process… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Not only will the practical feasibility of these "soft" remediation methods need to be demonstrated but a thorough knowledge of degradation products and their toxicity is necessary (Weber et al 2008b;Andersson et al 2009). For example, the detection of several metabolites of HCH isomers (pentachlorocyclohexanols, pentachlorocyclohexenes and tetrachlorocyclohexane-diols) have been reported some of them with significantly higher water solubility and therefore mobility as compared to the parent HCHs (Raina et al 2007(Raina et al , 2008b.…”
Section: Preliminary Studies On Degradation and Remediation Of Hch Comentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Not only will the practical feasibility of these "soft" remediation methods need to be demonstrated but a thorough knowledge of degradation products and their toxicity is necessary (Weber et al 2008b;Andersson et al 2009). For example, the detection of several metabolites of HCH isomers (pentachlorocyclohexanols, pentachlorocyclohexenes and tetrachlorocyclohexane-diols) have been reported some of them with significantly higher water solubility and therefore mobility as compared to the parent HCHs (Raina et al 2007(Raina et al , 2008b.…”
Section: Preliminary Studies On Degradation and Remediation Of Hch Comentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was recently demonstrated, e.g. for a PAH contaminated site, that the toxicity of the soil increased during bioremediation, although the target 16 EPA PAH had decreased (Andersson et al 2009). For HCHcontaminated sites, more water-soluble degradation products like chlorinated cyclohexenols and cyclohexenediols (Raina et al 2007(Raina et al , 2008 need to be taken into consideration.…”
Section: Recommendations and Perspectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This suggests that the surfactant addition led to an overall increase in toxicity, either through the increased contaminant availability or through an inherent toxicity of the surfactant or a combination of both resulting in an interactive effect. Increased PAH availability as a result of bioremediation has been observed earlier (Andersson et al 2009). It is hypothesized that the degrading microorganisms utilize different methods to enhance the bioavailability in order to reach strongly sorbed compounds, but that the subsequent degradation has not taken place.…”
Section: Ecotoxicological Characterizationmentioning
confidence: 68%