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Diesel contamination of Antarctic soils and sediments

Citation

MGnify (2016). Diesel contamination of Antarctic soils and sediments. Sampling event dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/jhh5bp accessed via GBIF.org on 2025-05-22.

Description

Hydrocarbon contamination is a threat resulting from human activity in Antarctica because of the low degradation rate due to the cold climate conditions and the seasonal freezing and thawing of soil in summer ice-free areas like the Antarctic Peninsula. Hydrocarbons can accidentally reach soil and sediments and distribute underground, likely affecting the biota and causing changes in bacterial communities. Monitoring and study of the distribution of hydrocarbons and the consequent response of the microbiota helps in the design of bioremediation strategies and elaboration of contingency plans, both required by the Antarcic Treaty.

Sampling Description

Sampling

Hydrocarbon contamination is a threat resulting from human activity in Antarctica because of the low degradation rate due to the cold climate conditions and the seasonal freezing and thawing of soil in summer ice-free areas like the Antarctic Peninsula. Hydrocarbons can accidentally reach soil and sediments and distribute underground, likely affecting the biota and causing changes in bacterial communities. Monitoring and study of the distribution of hydrocarbons and the consequent response of the microbiota helps in the design of bioremediation strategies and elaboration of contingency plans, both required by the Antarcic Treaty.

Method steps

  1. Pipeline used: https://www.ebi.ac.uk/metagenomics/pipelines/4.1

Taxonomic Coverages

Geographic Coverages

Bibliographic Citations

Contacts

originator
NANOBIOTEC
metadata author
NANOBIOTEC
administrative point of contact
NANOBIOTEC
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