Microbial Communities in Full-Scale Wastewater Treatment Systems Exhibit Deterministic Assembly Processes and Functional Dependency over Time

2021 ◽  
Vol 55 (8) ◽  
pp. 5312-5323
Author(s):  
Jinjin Yu ◽  
Siang Nee Tang ◽  
Patrick K. H. Lee
2016 ◽  
pp. 59-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jashan Gokal ◽  
Oluyemi Olatunji Awolusi ◽  
Abimbola Motunrayo Enitan ◽  
Sheena Kumari ◽  
Faizal Bux

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Munawwar Ali Khan ◽  
Shams Tabrez Khan ◽  
Milred Cedric Sequeira ◽  
Sultan Mohammad Faheem

Abstract Understanding the microbial communities in anaerobic digesters is important for better regulation, operation, and sustainable management of the sludge produced at various stages of wastewater treatment processes. Microbial communities in the anaerobic digester of the gulf region where the climatic conditions and other factors may impact the incoming feed have not been documented. Archaeal and Bacterial communities of three full-scale anaerobic digesters, namely AD1, AD3 and AD5 were analyzed by Illumina sequencing of 16S rRNA genes. Among bacteria, the most abundant genus was fermentative bacteria Acetobacteroides (Blvii28). Other predominant bacterial genera in the digesters included thermophilic bacteria (Fervidobacterium and Coprothermobacter) and halophilic bacteria like Haloterrigena and Sediminibacter. This can be correlated with the climatic condition in Dubai, where the bacteria in the original feed may be thermophilic or halophilic as much of the water used in the country is desalinated seawater. Propionic acid-producing bacteria like Paludibacter and propionate oxidizing bacteria like W5 were also dominating group and were found in all the digesters. The predominant Archaea include mainly the members of phylum Euryarchaeota and Crenarchaeota belonging to genus Methanocorpusculum, Metallosphaera, Methanocella, and Methanococcus. The highest population of Methanocorpusculum (more than 50% of total Archaea) hydrogenotrophic archaea matches with the high population of Acetobacteroides (Blvii28) and Fervidobacterium bacteria which ferments the organic substrates to acetate and H2. Coprothermobacter, which is known to improve protein degradation by establishing a syntrophy with hydrogenotrophic archaea, was also one of the dominant genera in the digesters. This study, for the first time, contributes to an in-depth understanding of the phylogenetic diversity of a microbial community of three full-scale anaerobic digesters of a municipal wastewater treatment plant in Dubai, UAE.


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Blaise William Atkinson

General removal of phosphorus (P) from wastewater was introduced in Scandanavia in the late 1960's. At that time it was believed that P alone was limiting to algal growth and that the sole removal of P would solve the problem of eutrophication. However, we now know that both P and nitrogen (N) contribute to this deleterious effect and as such, much research has been conducted concerned with both the biological and chemical removal of these nutrients from sewage effluents. Enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR), which is basically the biological accumulation of soluble P (as polyphosphate or poly-P) from the bulk liquid in excess of normal metabolic requirements, still tends to be sensitive to many external parameters and, as such, is subject to fluctuations. This makes it extremely difficult for wastewater treatment installations to achieve and maintain full compliance with strict discharge regulations. A more comprehensive understanding of the microbial community within the mixed liquor of a wastewater treatment system is therefore required which will ultimately assist in improving system design and performance. Chemical and civil engineers, when designing biological wastewater treatment systems, consider only the processes (biological or chemical) taking place within the reactor/s with little or no regard for the individual microbial species or the entire microbial community involved. Process design appears to be tackled empirically from a 'black box' approach; biological reactions or processes occurring within a system such as wastewater treatment are all lumped together and attributed to a single surrogate organism ie., the response of the surrogate to certain stimuli accounts for the total system response. This is similar to an analogy which Professor George Ekama (Dept of Civil Engineering, UCT), a leading scientist in wastewater treatment and process design, refers to where engineers, if, for example, are confronted with modelling the dynamics of carbon dioxide utilisation ofa forest, would recognise the accumulative system response and not give cognisance to each individual tree's contribution. It is true that if one had to consider every microbial species present in a highly organised community such as activated sludge, process models, designed to make quantitative and qualitative predictions as to the expected effluent quality from a particular design, would become increasingly complex and superfluous. It is evident from the countless accomplishments that engineers have succeeded, to a certain degree, in modelling wastewater treatment systems. One only has to consider the tremendous success of biological P (bio-P) removal and nitrification/denitrification processes at full-scale. However, there are limitations to this empirical approach and EBPR processes occasionally deteriorate in phosphate removal efficiency. In order to further optimise biological processes, whether they be organics oxidation, bio-P removal, nitrification or denitrification, biological community analyses will have to play a more significant role in design. The better microbial community structure and function is understood, the better the control and management of the system. With the advent of improved microbial identification and enumeration (to a certain extent) techniques (in situ), it was considered significant to investigate the mechanism ofbio-P removal and to elucidate which bacteria are actively responsible for this process. To this end, experimental work was conducted in two phases: \xAE laboratory, where samples of mixed liquor were obtained from a full-scale wastewater treatment facility exhibiting biological nutrient removal (BNR) characteristics and @ pilot plant, where an enhanced culture ofpolyphosphate accumulating organisms (PAO's) was developed and probed using molecular identification and enumeration techniques (as well as a cultivation-dependent approach). During phase \xAE of experimentat


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1688 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara K. Wigginton ◽  
Elizabeth Q. Brannon ◽  
Patrick J. Kearns ◽  
Brittany V. Lancellotti ◽  
Alissa Cox ◽  
...  

Biological nitrogen removal (BNR) in centralized and decentralized wastewater treatment systems is assumed to be driven by the same microbial processes and to have communities with a similar composition and structure. There is, however, little information to support these assumptions, which may impact the effectiveness of decentralized systems. We used high-throughput sequencing to compare the structure and composition of the nitrifying and denitrifying bacterial communities of nine onsite wastewater treatment systems (OWTS) and one wastewater treatment plant (WTP) by targeting the genes coding for ammonia monooxygenase (amoA) and nitrous oxide reductase (nosZ). The amoA diversity was similar between the WTP and OWTS, but nosZ diversity was generally higher for the WTP. Beta diversity analyses showed the WTP and OWTS promoted distinct amoA and nosZ communities, although there is a core group of N-transforming bacteria common across scales of BNR treatment. Our results suggest that advanced N-removal OWTS have microbial communities that are sufficiently distinct from those of WTP with BNR, which may warrant different management approaches.


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