Abstract:
Pesticide use has been one of the major factors in improving productivity in agricultural
enterprises. Pesticide residues in food and drinking water when ingested affect human
health while ecosystems are also affected through loss of biodiversity. The aim of the
research was to survey pesticide usage in farms under horticultural production, isolate
bacterial strains, evaluate their biodegradation potential of selected pesticides,
characterize the bacteria isolates morphologically, biochemically and molecularly. A
survey in four horticultural regions of central and rift-valley Kenya showed that out of
the twenty two (22) formulations of organophosphorus pesticides used by farmers
diazinon had the highest proportion of application at 45.9%., followed by dimekill at
18.9% and least in application was brigade at 5.5%. Linuron was mostly applied with an
18.1% proportion of application followed by isoproturon at 13.2% and the least in
proportion of application was Neprapamide at 2.7%. Through enrichment cultures total
of thirty one (31) isolates were obtained from diazinon and linuron contaminated soils of
which thirteen (13) isolates had the ability to degrade linuron while eighteen (18)
isolates could degrade diazinon. Degradation of the pesticides was monitored by High
pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). Bacterial isolates had significant levels
(P<0.05) of the pesticides degradation. Isolate DJk-4A was the best diazinon degrader at
95.8% degradation followed by isolate DKi-6A at 93.66% while isolate DLoG-8A was
the third best degrader at 92.75%. Isolates LJk-5C had the highest level of linuron
degradation at 99.36% followed by LWa-2A at 98.94% and the third best degrader was
isolate LWa-2C at 95.54%. Identification of various degradation intermediate
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metabolites was aided by GC-MS analysis. Diversity of the isolates was assessed
through DNA sequencing and BLAST search. Phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rRNA
gene sequences showed diazinon degraders clustered into six genera namely;
Paracoccus, staphylococcus, Pseudomonas, Enterobacter, Klebsiella and Proteus.
Isolates DJk-4A clustered with Pseudomonas sp with a 97% sequence similarity to
Pseudomonas pituda. Isolate DKi-6B clustered with Staphylococcus sp with a sequence
similarity of 99% to Stapylococcus xylosus while isolate DLoG-8A had a 98-% sequence
similarity to Paracoccus sp. Linuron degrading isolates clustered into eight genera
namely; Myroides, Lysinibacillus, Arthrobacter, Stenotrophomonas, Burkholderia,
Xanthomonas, Pseudomonas and Enterobacter. Isolate LWa-2A was positioned among
Arthrobacter sp with a 97% identity to Arthrobacter globiformis. Isolate LWa-2C
clustered with Burkholderia sp with a 99% sequence identity with Burkholderia cepacia.
Isolate LJk-5C clustered with pseudomonas sp with a sequence similarity of 98% to
pseudomonas migulae.
The study showed that isolates from the genera Pseudomonas, Staphylococcus,
Paracoccus, Arthrobacter and Burkholderia could be used to remediate diazinon and
linuron contaminated soils under horticultural production. Further studies should be done
to identify and characterize proteins involved in the biodegradation activities of these
pesticides.