Screening and Identification of Diesel BiodegradingBacteria Isolated From Petroleum HydrocarbonContaminated Garage Soils of Kericho County, Kenya

dc.contributor.authorZeddy Yegon
dc.contributor.authorJohn M. Wagacha
dc.contributor.authorEvans Nyaboga
dc.contributor.authorRichard Chalo
dc.contributor.authorEliud Wafula
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-17T09:28:25Z
dc.date.issued2025-12
dc.description.abstractDespite the benefits of petroleum hydrocarbon as essential raw energy sources in many industries, they cause major globalenvironmental pollution. Petroleum hydrocarbons pollutants are highly toxic and recalcitrant, making them dangerous andpersistent over long periods in an ecosystem. However, oil contaminated soil is enriched with microorganisms that can uti-lize petroleum products and hydrocarbons for their growth, nutrition, and metabolic activities. This study aimed to isolate andcharacterize hydrocarbons-degrading bacteria capable of degrading hydrocarbons in soil samples obtained from oil-pollutedgarage sites in Kericho County, Kenya. One hundred and ten (110) bacterial isolates were isolated after enrichment, with 67of the isolates (60.9%) having visible petroleum diesel-degrading capability. The bacteria were characterized based on pheno-typic characteristics and 16S rRNA gene sequence analyses. Forty-nine of the isolates were Gram negative rods, and majority(56) of the isolates reacted positively for catalase and negatively for oxidase (38), methyl red (59), and Voges Proskauer (65);50.9% of the isolates tested positive for citrate utilization. More than half of the isolated bacteria (69.7%) demonstrated strongevidence of diesel degradation. Bacteria with moderate diesel degradation demonstration accounted for 18.2% of the isolates,while isolates with substantial diesel residues contributed 12.1%. Following 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis, the bacterialstrains were identified as belonging to the genera Acinetobacter (8), Pseudarthrobacter (4), Corynebacterium (2), Gordonia (2),Athrobacter (2), Microbacterium (2), Acidivorax (1), Pseudoxanthomonas (1), Priestia (1), Cellulosimicrobium (1), Cupriavidus (1),Paenarthrobacter (1), Exiguobacterium (1), Shewanella (1), Stutzerimonas (1), and Pseudomonas (1). This study has demonstratedthat garage soils with petroleum hydrocarbon contamination in Kericho County harbor a rich and diverse indigenous populationof microbes with the ability to biodegrade diesel. The findings suggest potential application of these bacterial strains to facilitatethe biodegradation of petroleum hydrocarbons.
dc.description.sponsorshipUniversity of Kabianga, UOK/DIR/RLE/RG/022VOL.4/133.
dc.identifier.citationYegon, Z., Wagacha, J. M., Nyaboga, E., Chalo, R., & Wafula, E. (2026). Screening and Identification of Diesel Biodegrading Bacteria Isolated From Petroleum Hydrocarbon Contaminated Garage Soils of Kericho County, Kenya. International Journal of Microbiology, 2026(1), 8823953.
dc.identifier.urihttps://ir-library.kabianga.ac.ke/handle/123456789/1133
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherInternational Journal of Microbiology
dc.subjectbacterial diversity | bioremediation | hydrocarbon | hydrocarbon biodegradation | petroleum contaminated soils
dc.titleScreening and Identification of Diesel BiodegradingBacteria Isolated From Petroleum HydrocarbonContaminated Garage Soils of Kericho County, Kenya
dc.typeArticle

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