Scientists Muck Around in Toxic Mud

Michael Jackson sinks his feet into blackened, mercury-tainted mud on the edge of a swamp littered with old, broken bottles and smelling a little like gasoline. He takes a metal spatula, sniffs the dirt and scoops a hunk of it into a 50-milligram test tube.

print article
A | A | A

MOONACHIE, N.J. (AP) - ``There's a lot of bacteria in this soil,' said Jackson, a Rutgers University microbiology graduate student. ``They'll eat anything they can.'

Since last October, Jackson and fellow graduate student Jann Weile have been coming to Berry's Creek to collect the most toxic, contaminated soil they can find. The creek, one of the most chemically extreme environments in New Jersey, is a Superfund site and former headquarters of a mercury plant in the Meadowlands.

Jackson and Weile are in search of pay dirt in the mud, microbes that can survive in unconventional, toxic conditions. Those microbes, Jackson says, may be used one day to create a new antibiotic, an industrial enzyme, possibly a bacteria that can help clean up toxic sites.

``Someone's trash is someone else's gold,' he said, wading in the sticky mud.

Jackson and Rutgers professor Gerben Zylstra have a three-year contract with Diversa Corp., a San Diego-based biotechnology company, to provide soil samples from several sites at the Meadowlands.

Diversa isn't saying if it has found anything useful. But since collections began, the company has asked Jackson to double his output from 100 to 200 samples a year.

Diversa has collected samples from hot boiling springs at Yellowstone National Park and Antarctica in the hopes of finding proteins or molecules that have unique genetic properties, company spokeswoman Hillary Theakston said.

``The presence of toxic metals and other chemicals would have some unique survival properties,' Theakston said. ``It would be really hard if you can imagine trying to recreate those conditions.'

A Rutgers professor who met Diversa representatives at a conference suggested the Meadowlands, wetlands that have been rehabilitated over the years to foster the growth of muskrat, swans, phragmites grass and several endangered species.

For many decades before that, however, the area was known as a dumping ground for toxic waste, other trash, and, some suspected, possibly dead bodies. Authorities once searched the swampland for the body of presumed-dead union leader James Hoffa, and in more recent years looked for New York socialite Irene Silverman.

Jackson said the Meadowlands is ideal for the Diversa research because it has a history that is well-documented by a group called the Meadowlands Environmental Research Institute, which works with Rutgers and the Hackensack Meadowlands Developmental Commission.

Whether Jackson is looking for hydrocarbon spills, pesticides or heavy metals, the institute will point him in the right direction.

One day in July, Jackson and Weile drove to a warehouse parking lot, crossed a wooden bridge over a mud flat and hiked through 10-foot high weeds before arriving at Berry's Creek. They stepped carefully down the bank into the mud. Weile donned thigh-high rubber boots and plastic gloves to collect samples from the water, while Jackson stayed on the shore to scoop up the mud.

The blacker the mud, he says, the more toxic. A bluish-pink sheen in a site like this is also a giveaway for heavy chemical contamination, he said.

Back in his lab, Jackson extracts the DNA from some of the soils and ships them within 24 hours to Diversa, a developer of farm, chemical, industrial and pharmaceutical products. The company has signed a three-year contract with Rutgers, although it refuses to disclose the amount.

Diversa supplies Rutgers with the equipment needed to take the samples, under the contract. If Diversa makes a discovery found in the toxic soil, although product development may take years, Rutgers will receive a small percentage of the profits, university officials said.

And Zylstra's lab is doing its own research on bioremediation, or using bacteria to eat other toxic compounds and clean up toxic sites.

``If you can find a bacteria that can live in an oil spill and manipulate its genetics,' Jackson said, ``you might have something.'

Advertisement

TigerDirect
Poll: Like Our New Look?
Do you like our new Hypography look & feel?

Sponsored links

More to explore

Log in
Tags
No tags for this article
Author info
Rate this article
0
Just a test.
Just another test.