dc.description.abstract | In the current thesis, an effort is made to investigate the potential for local tea garden
bacterial isolates to biodegrade a number of pesticides that are routinely used in agricultural
fields. The composite sampling technique was used to gather soil samples from eight separate
sampling locations. The soil samples' physiochemical characteristics were examined. the
relationship between bacterial population and pesticide residues in sampling sites was also
investigated. The bacterial population and pesticide fate in the environment are affected by
physiochemical factors, particularly soil pH. Ten native bacterial isolates (DRNB1, EON2,
SFN1, TXM1, F1T, Q1T, GLYB2, PTEB2, FXE1, and SFT1) were isolated and evaluated for
degradation studies from pesticide-applied tea plantation areas. All the bacterial isolates are
characterized by molecular analysis and the phylogenetic tree was also constructed using
MEGA X. Through a disc diffusion assay, isolates were evaluated for their ability to tolerate
up to 500 ppm concentrations of eight different pesticides (Deltamethrin, Spiromesifen,
ethion, Thiamethoxam, Quinalphos, Fenpyroximate, Glyphosate, and Propargite). For tests on
pesticide degradation, isolates that could withstand pesticide concentrations up to 500 ppm
were used. The formation of biosurfactants, enzyme activity, and biofilm was also
investigated in the bacterial isolates. The growth of bacterial isolates in carbon, nitrogen, and
pesticide sources was examined. The optimization of parameters for pesticide degradation
studies was done using the Taguchi optimization methodology. The metabolites formed
through the pesticide degradation were analyzed by GC-MS analysis. A microbial consortium
(PDMC1-Pesticide Degrading Microbial Consortium) was created for the pesticide
deltamethrin's degradation, and about 91% of the pesticide's degradation in MSM was
observed. DRNB1-Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, SFN1-Stenotrophomonas [Pseudomonas]
geniculate, and FXE1-Pseudomonas aeruginosa are the three bacterial isolates that make up
the consortium. | en_US |