2013
DOI: 10.1007/s11270-013-1601-6
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Treatment of Oily Bilge Water from Small Fishing Vessels by PUF-Immobilized Gordonia sp. JC11

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Cited by 32 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Fishing vessels also have the potential to discharge other pollutants to surrounding waters,, some of which may produce notable environmental impacts such as anti-foulant hull coatings (Matthiessen et al 1999, Matthiessen and Law 2002, Andersen 2004, Hospido and Tyedmers 2005, engine effluent and exhaust (Thrane 2006, fueling operations, spills, and bilgewater (Lin et al 2007, Vazquez-Rowe et al 2010, Chanthamalee et al 2013, Mclaughlin et al 2014, and on a limited number of fishing vessels, ballast water (Carlton 1989;Drake et al 2007;Ruiz et al 1997). Industrial fishing operations, such as seafood processing, also have the potential to produce significant local loadings of pollutants (Nair 1990, Islam et al 2004, Chowdhury et al 2010).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fishing vessels also have the potential to discharge other pollutants to surrounding waters,, some of which may produce notable environmental impacts such as anti-foulant hull coatings (Matthiessen et al 1999, Matthiessen and Law 2002, Andersen 2004, Hospido and Tyedmers 2005, engine effluent and exhaust (Thrane 2006, fueling operations, spills, and bilgewater (Lin et al 2007, Vazquez-Rowe et al 2010, Chanthamalee et al 2013, Mclaughlin et al 2014, and on a limited number of fishing vessels, ballast water (Carlton 1989;Drake et al 2007;Ruiz et al 1997). Industrial fishing operations, such as seafood processing, also have the potential to produce significant local loadings of pollutants (Nair 1990, Islam et al 2004, Chowdhury et al 2010).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The microbial metabolism method is the use of microbial degradation of crude oil, to convert organic matter, including oil, as nutrients into the microbe organic ingredients or to proliferate into new microorganisms, thereby to remove organic matter in wastewater [56]. Chanthamalee et al [57] examined application of polyurethane foam (PUF)-immobilized Gordonia sp. JC11, a known lubricant-degrading bacterial inoculum, for the treatment of bilge water.…”
Section: Microbial Metabolism Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Immobilized bacteria (4 g/L) were effective in removing 85 ± 5% TPH and 73 ± 11% COD from carwash wastewater containing 25-200 mg/L lubricant at HRT of 2 h within 70 d. However, in a semicontinuous batch experiment, the immobilized bacteria had a removal efficiency of 80-90% of TPH (200 mg/L). Chanthamalee et al (2013) treated oily bilge from small fishing vessels using polyurethane foam-immobilized Gordonia sp. JC11.…”
Section: Bioreactors For Oily Wastewater Treatment Using Immobilized Microorganismsmentioning
confidence: 99%