Heavy Metals Tolerance Potential of Fungi Species Isolated from Gold Mine Tailings in Ghana

Introduction: Heavy metal contamination has necessitated a less expensive and non-destructive clean-up technique such as mycoremediation. This study aimed to isolate, identify, and evaluate the tolerance of fungi species in different concentrations of heavy metals for their potential use in bioremed...

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Main Authors: Emmanuel Sey, Ebenezer J. D. Belford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences 2021-03-01
Series:Journal of Environmental Health and Sustainable Development
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jehsd.ssu.ac.ir/article-1-279-en.html
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spelling doaj-e439cc80895844d1b2ba22cf327ccdd02021-03-15T08:59:58ZengShahid Sadoughi University of Medical SciencesJournal of Environmental Health and Sustainable Development2476-62672476-74332021-03-016112311242Heavy Metals Tolerance Potential of Fungi Species Isolated from Gold Mine Tailings in GhanaEmmanuel Sey0Ebenezer J. D. Belford1 Department of Materials Engineering, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana. Department of Theoretical and Applied Biology, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana. Introduction: Heavy metal contamination has necessitated a less expensive and non-destructive clean-up technique such as mycoremediation. This study aimed to isolate, identify, and evaluate the tolerance of fungi species in different concentrations of heavy metals for their potential use in bioremediation. Materials and Methods: Fungi were isolated by serial dilution and spread plate techniques from gold tailings and their tolerance to different concentrations of As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, Zn (as potential bioremediation candidates) was evaluated. Fungal radial growths were recorded daily over a 14 days’ incubation period to establish their tolerance levels using the Tolerance Index. Results: Five isolated fungi species belonged to the genera Aspergillus, Trichophyton, Rhizopus, Trametes, and Trichoderma. Except for Trichophyton rubrum, the other fungi species were tolerant to all Cr concentrations (0 – 100ppm), but no significant difference was observed in mycelia growth compared to their controls. With high tolerance index ranging from 0.91 to 1.02, Trichoderma viride and Rhizopus oryzae were tolerant to all Cu concentrations (0 – 125ppm). High tolerance was exhibited by Trametes versicolor to Cd at 25 and 50 ppm, and by Rhizopus oryzae at 25 ppm, but no significant difference was found in mycelia growth. Rhizopus oryzae tolerated all As and Pb concentrations with high tolerance index ranging from 0.81 to 1.00. It also tolerated   Zn at 200-600ppm concentration with a tolerance index from 0.80 to 0.91. Conclusion: The selective nature of these fungi species for specific heavy metal tolerance indicates their potential for selective use as effective bioremediative clean up agent of heavy metals contaminated sites.http://jehsd.ssu.ac.ir/article-1-279-en.htmlcontaminationbioremediationfungiheavy metalstoleranceghana.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emmanuel Sey
Ebenezer J. D. Belford
spellingShingle Emmanuel Sey
Ebenezer J. D. Belford
Heavy Metals Tolerance Potential of Fungi Species Isolated from Gold Mine Tailings in Ghana
Journal of Environmental Health and Sustainable Development
contamination
bioremediation
fungi
heavy metals
tolerance
ghana.
author_facet Emmanuel Sey
Ebenezer J. D. Belford
author_sort Emmanuel Sey
title Heavy Metals Tolerance Potential of Fungi Species Isolated from Gold Mine Tailings in Ghana
title_short Heavy Metals Tolerance Potential of Fungi Species Isolated from Gold Mine Tailings in Ghana
title_full Heavy Metals Tolerance Potential of Fungi Species Isolated from Gold Mine Tailings in Ghana
title_fullStr Heavy Metals Tolerance Potential of Fungi Species Isolated from Gold Mine Tailings in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Heavy Metals Tolerance Potential of Fungi Species Isolated from Gold Mine Tailings in Ghana
title_sort heavy metals tolerance potential of fungi species isolated from gold mine tailings in ghana
publisher Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences
series Journal of Environmental Health and Sustainable Development
issn 2476-6267
2476-7433
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Introduction: Heavy metal contamination has necessitated a less expensive and non-destructive clean-up technique such as mycoremediation. This study aimed to isolate, identify, and evaluate the tolerance of fungi species in different concentrations of heavy metals for their potential use in bioremediation. Materials and Methods: Fungi were isolated by serial dilution and spread plate techniques from gold tailings and their tolerance to different concentrations of As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, Zn (as potential bioremediation candidates) was evaluated. Fungal radial growths were recorded daily over a 14 days’ incubation period to establish their tolerance levels using the Tolerance Index. Results: Five isolated fungi species belonged to the genera Aspergillus, Trichophyton, Rhizopus, Trametes, and Trichoderma. Except for Trichophyton rubrum, the other fungi species were tolerant to all Cr concentrations (0 – 100ppm), but no significant difference was observed in mycelia growth compared to their controls. With high tolerance index ranging from 0.91 to 1.02, Trichoderma viride and Rhizopus oryzae were tolerant to all Cu concentrations (0 – 125ppm). High tolerance was exhibited by Trametes versicolor to Cd at 25 and 50 ppm, and by Rhizopus oryzae at 25 ppm, but no significant difference was found in mycelia growth. Rhizopus oryzae tolerated all As and Pb concentrations with high tolerance index ranging from 0.81 to 1.00. It also tolerated   Zn at 200-600ppm concentration with a tolerance index from 0.80 to 0.91. Conclusion: The selective nature of these fungi species for specific heavy metal tolerance indicates their potential for selective use as effective bioremediative clean up agent of heavy metals contaminated sites.
topic contamination
bioremediation
fungi
heavy metals
tolerance
ghana.
url http://jehsd.ssu.ac.ir/article-1-279-en.html
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