Skip Navigation

Noticias

  • Imprimir
  • Comentar

Chicken droppings could help clear up oil spills

Yidong Gong

20 marzo 2009 | EN | 中文

Chicken droppings contain useful bacteria

Flickr/Ben124

[BEIJING] Chicken droppings may be one answer to cleaning up soil contaminated with crude oil, according to researchers in China.

Soil that has been ploughed with chicken manure breaks down 50 per cent more crude oil than soil lacking the manure, according to a team led by Huiwen Ma, a professor of biochemistry at China's Wuhan University.

The contamination of soil by crude oil is a growing problem as China accelerates its exploitation of oil reserves to meet rising energy demands. The fifth largest oil producer in the world, China produced 190 million tons of crude oil in 2008.

But the environment has paid a huge price. The Zhongyuan oilfield in Henan has polluted over 1,700 hectares of adjacent farmland, according to a preliminary calculation by Henan Agricultural University in 2002.

Previously, scientists have applied chemical fertilisers to the soil to encourage microbes to degrade the oil. But the fertilisers are expensive, can threaten the environment themselves and also cause the soil to harden and become less fertile.

In their laboratory experiment Ma's team found that a Bacillus species found in chicken manure is the most effective oil-removing microbe.

The manure decreases the acidity of soil, creating an environment ideal for the bacterial degradation.

The chicken farms that have sprung up over China in recent years have made accumulating chicken manure a more realistic prospect, said Zhang Zhongzhi, a professor of biochemical engineering from the China University of Petroleum. Ma's research offers a pragmatic approach to biodegradation, he told SciDev.Net. 

But Ma said that, in the field, the manure will take longer to work because of differences in oxygen supply and fluctuating temperatures.

The study was published in the International Journal of Environment and Pollution in February.

Link to abstract in International Journal of Environment and Pollution

AGREGUE SU COMENTARIO

Esta es su red: comparta sus opiniones sobre cualquiera de nuestros artículos agregando sus comentarios.

Usted debe registrarse para enviar un comentario o para escribir a un autor que haya aceptado recibir comentarios. Por favor entrarsuscribirse.

Todos los comentarios están sujetos a revisión. Nos reservamos el derecho de editar los comentarios que contengan un lenguaje inapropiado o inadecuado. SciDev.Net mantiene los derechos de autor de todo el material que se publica en el portal. Por favor lea las condiciones de uso para más detalles.

Todo el material de SciDev.Net se puede reproducir gratuitamente siempre que se de crédito a la fuente y al autor. Para más detalles ver Creative commons.

Volver Noticias
Subir