Caulerpa racemosa for the removal of hydrocarbons from seawater.

An article I found interesting. ;)

Preliminary evaluation of hydrocarbon removal power of Caulerpa racemosa in seawater by means of infrared and visible spectroscopic measurements
http://www.sciencedirect.com/scienc...4cf025d38f2f083b8af5df7d331ae457&searchtype=a


Marco Pietrolettia, Alfredo Capobianchia, Emanuela Ragostaa and Mauro Mecozzi, a, ,

a Laboratory of Chemometrics and Environmental Applications, ISPRA, Via di Casalotti 300, 00166 Rome, Italy

Received 10 December 2009; revised 21 June 2010; accepted 12 July 2010. Available online 17 July 2010.

Abstract
In this paper we tested the power of Caulerpa racemosa for removal hydrocarbons from seawater. C. racemosa was implanted in two aquariums filled with natural seawater having a hydrocarbon content lower than 0.05 mg/L which is the detection limit of the FTIR spectrophotometric method used for the determination. One aquarium was submitted to sequential additions of hydrocarbons (n-esadecane 10, 20 and 40 mg/L, n-docosane 15 mg/L) and diesel fuels (20 mg/L) while the second one remained uncontaminated and used as control. After any addition, hydrocarbon content in seawater was determined at regular time intervals (one or two days) and when comparable hydrocarbon contents (i.e. lower than 0.05 mg/L) were again observed, the real removal power of hydrocarbons was verified by several spectroscopic measurements performed on algae from both aquariums. Total hydrocarbon contents in algae determined by infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, always resulted higher in the polluted aquarium for all the concentrations of added pollutants. Further FTIR studies performed on algae showed the presence of marked quantitative and structural molecular modifications involving carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids and chlorophyll pigments in C. racemosa from the aquarium test. In addition, visible (VIS) spectroscopic examination of C. racemosa showed a reduction of chlorophyll pigments in the polluted aquarium with respect to the control one. At last, FTIR spectra all the algal samples submitted to hydrocarbon pollution were re-examined by means of two-dimensional correlation analysis, a statistical tool helpful for studying the dynamic evolution of any molecular and biological system submitted to an external perturbation producing compositional and structural changes. This approach showed differences among the molecular modifications caused by any type of hydrocarbon used, modifications related reasonably to the molecular dimensions and concentration of the added pollutants. All these spectroscopic evidences suggested that the removal power of C. racemosa depends on its metabolic activities and not only on a simple adsorption process.
 
Interesting. I wouldn't have suspected this to be true. I've not seen the actual study, but I'll note that it may not be entirely clear that the Caulerpa is the actual agent that converts the organics, but could include bacteria growing on the Caulerpa or elsewhere in the system that do some of the initial transformations of generally inedible organics to more common ones like carbohydrates.
 
Interesting, thanks Cliff. Made me wonder if the Italians find a good purpose for C. taxifolia in places like the med.
 
Interesting. I wouldn't have suspected this to be true. I've not seen the actual study, but I'll note that it may not be entirely clear that the Caulerpa is the actual agent that converts the organics, but could include bacteria growing on the Caulerpa or elsewhere in the system that do some of the initial transformations of generally inedible organics to more common ones like carbohydrates.

Very good point Randy. ;)

Eliminating the bacterial factor would be difficult. :D
 
So does this mean I don't have to wash My hands,after coming home from working on cars all day,before putting them in My tank?:hammer:
 
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