McQuillan J S, Hopper D J, Magiopoulos I, Arundell M, Brown R, Shorter S, Mowlem M C, Pascal R W, Connelly D
Ocean Technology and Engineering, National Oceanography Centre (NOC), Southampton, UK.
Lett Appl Microbiol. 2016 Dec;63(6):393-399. doi: 10.1111/lam.12671. Epub 2016 Nov 8.
Biofouling is a process of ecological succession which begins with the attachment and colonization of micro-organisms to a submerged surface. For marine sensors and their housings, biofouling can be one of the principle limitations to long-term deployment and reliability. Conventional antibiofouling strategies using biocides can be hazardous to the environment, and therefore alternative chemical-free methods are preferred. In this study, custom-made testing assemblies were used to evaluate ultrasonic vibration as an antibiofouling process for marine sensor-housing materials over a 28-day time course. Microbial biofouling was measured based on (i) surface coverage, using fluorescence microscopy and (ii) bacterial 16S rDNA gene copies, using Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Ultrasonic vibrations (20 KHz, 200 ms pulses at 2-s intervals; total power 16·08 W) significantly reduced the surface coverage on two plastics, poly(methyl methacrylate) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) for up to 28 days. Bacterial gene copy number was similarly reduced, but the results were only statistically significant for PVC, which displayed the greatest overall resistance to biofouling, regardless of whether ultrasonic vibration was applied. Copper sheet, which has intrinsic biocidal properties was resistant to biofouling during the early stages of the experiment, but inhibited measurements made by PCR and generated inconsistent results later on.
In this study, ultrasonic acoustic vibration is presented as a chemical-free, ecologically friendly alternative to conventional methods for the perturbation of microbial attachment to submerged surfaces. The results indicate the potential of an ultrasonic antibiofouling method for the disruption of microbial biofilms on marine sensor housings, which is typically a principle limiting factor in their long-term operation in the oceans. With increasing deployment of scientific apparatus in aquatic environments, including further offshore and for longer duration, the identification and evaluation of novel antifouling strategies that do not employ hazardous chemicals are widely sought.
生物污损是一个生态演替过程,始于微生物附着并定殖在水下表面。对于海洋传感器及其外壳而言,生物污损可能是长期部署和可靠性的主要限制因素之一。使用杀菌剂的传统防污策略可能对环境有害,因此更倾向于使用无化学物质的替代方法。在本研究中,定制测试组件用于在28天的时间内评估超声振动作为海洋传感器外壳材料的防污过程。基于以下方法测量微生物生物污损:(i)使用荧光显微镜观察表面覆盖率,以及(ii)使用定量聚合酶链反应(PCR)检测细菌16S rDNA基因拷贝数。超声振动(20 kHz,每隔2秒脉冲200毫秒;总功率16.08瓦)在长达28天的时间内显著降低了两种塑料(聚甲基丙烯酸甲酯和聚氯乙烯(PVC))的表面覆盖率。细菌基因拷贝数也有类似程度的减少,但结果仅在PVC上具有统计学意义,PVC总体上对生物污损具有最大抗性,无论是否施加超声振动。具有固有杀菌特性的铜板在实验初期对生物污损具有抗性,但后期抑制了PCR测量并产生了不一致的结果。
在本研究中,超声振动被提出作为一种无化学物质、生态友好的替代方法,用于干扰微生物附着在水下表面。结果表明,超声防污方法具有破坏海洋传感器外壳上微生物生物膜的潜力,而微生物生物膜通常是其在海洋中长期运行的主要限制因素。随着科学仪器在水生环境中的部署增加,包括进一步向近海和更长时间的部署,广泛寻求识别和评估不使用有害化学物质的新型防污策略。