An integrated metagenomic and metabolite profiling study of hydrocarbon biodegradation and corrosion in navy ships

Author:

Marks Christopher R.ORCID,Duncan Kathleen E.ORCID,Nanny Mark A.ORCID,Harriman Brian H.,Avci RecepORCID,Oldham Athenia L.ORCID,Suflita Joseph M.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractNaval vessels regularly mix fuel and seawater as ballast, a practice that might exacerbate fuel biodegradation and metal biocorrosion. To investigate, a metagenomic characterization and metabolite profiling of ballast from U.S. Navy vessels with residence times of 1-, ~20-, and 31 weeks was conducted and compared with the seawater used to fill the tanks. Aerobic Gammaproteobacteria differentially proliferated in the youngest ballast tank and aerobic-specific hydrocarbon degradation genes were quantitatively more important compared to seawater or the other ballast tanks. In contrast, the anaerobic Deltaproteobacteria dominated in the eldest ballast fluid with anaerobic-specific hydrocarbon activation genes being far more prominent. Gene activity was corroborated by detection of diagnostic metabolites and corrosion was evident by elevated levels of Fe, Mn, Ni and Cu in all ballast samples relative to seawater. The findings argue that marine microbial communities rapidly shift from aerobic to anaerobic hydrocarbonoclastic-dominated assemblages that accelerate fuel and infrastructure deterioration.

Funder

United States Department of Defense | United States Navy | ONR | Office of Naval Research Global

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Materials Chemistry,Materials Science (miscellaneous),Chemistry (miscellaneous),Ceramics and Composites

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