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Integrative study of microbial community dynamics and water quality along The Apatlaco River
2019
Breton-Deval, Luz | Sánchez Flores, Alejandro | Juárez, Katy | Vera-Estrella, Rosario
The increasing demand for clean water resources for human consumption, is raising concerning about the sustainable worldwide provisioning. In Mexico, rivers near to high-density urbanizations are subject to irrational exploitation where polluted water is a risk for human health. Therefore, the aims of this study are to analyze water quality parameters and bacterial community dynamics to understand the relation between them, in the Apatlaco river, which presents a clear environmental perturbance. Parameters such as total coliforms, chemical oxygen demand, harness, ammonium, nitrite, nitrate, total Kjeldahl nitrogen, dissolved oxygen, total phosphorus, total dissolved solids, and temperature were analyzed in 17 sampling points along the river. The high pollution level was registered in the sampling point 10 with 480 mg/L chemical oxygen demand, 7 mg/L nitrite, 34 mg/L nitrate, 2 mg/L dissolved oxygen, and 299 mg/L of total dissolved solids. From these sites, we selected four samples for DNA extraction and performed a metagenomic analysis using a whole metagenome shotgun approach, to compare the microbial communities between polluted and non-polluted sites. In general, Proteobacteria was the most representative phylum in all sites. However, the clean water reference point was enriched with microorganism from the Limnohabitans genus, a planktonic bacterium widespread in freshwater ecosystems. Nevertheless, in the polluted sampled sites, we found a high abundance of potential opportunistic pathogen genera such as Acinetobacter, Arcobacter, and Myroides, among others. This suggests that in addition to water contamination, an imminent human health risk due to pathogenic bacteria can potentially affect a population of ∼1.6 million people dwelling nearby. These results will contribute to the knowledge regarding anthropogenic pollution on the microbial population dynamic and how they affect human health and life quality.
Show more [+] Less [-]High-rate anaerobic treatment of digestate using fixed film reactors
2019
Ülgüdür, Nilüfer | Ergüder, Tuba H. | Uludağ-Demirer, Sibel | Demirer, Göksel N.
The effluent stream of the anaerobic digestion processes, the digestate, accommodates high residual organic content that needs to be further treated before discharge. Anaerobic treatment of digestate would not only reduce the residual organic compounds in digestate but also has a potential to capture the associated biogas. High-rate anaerobic reactor configurations can treat the waste streams using lower hydraulic retention times which requires less footprint opposed to the conventional completely stirred tank reactors. This study investigated the high-rate anaerobic treatment performance and the associated biogas capture from the digestate of a manure mixture composed of 90% laying hen and 10% cattle manures in fixed-film reactors. The results indicated that it was possible to reduce total chemical oxygen demand content of the digestate by 57–62% in 1.3–1.4 days of hydraulic retention time. The corresponding biogas yields obtained were in the range of 0.395–0.430 Lbiogas/g VSadded which were found to be comparable to many raw feedstocks. Moreover, significant total phosphorus reduction (36–47%) and greenhouse gas capture (over 14.5–18.1 tCO2e/d per m3 digestate) were also recorded in the anaerobic fixed-film reactors.
Show more [+] Less [-]Efficient degradation of AO7 by ceria-delafossite nanocomposite with non-inert support as a synergistic catalyst in electro-fenton process
2019
Nazari, Pegah | Tootoonchian, Pedram | Setayesh, Shahrbanoo Rahman
CuFeO₂/CeO₂ as a novel catalyst was synthesized and its catalytic performance was evaluated for electro-Fenton degradation of acid orange 7 (AO7). It was demonstrated from the characterization results that the rhombohedral structure of CuFeO₂ and face-centered cubic fluorite structure of CeO₂ remained stable after nanocomposite construction. The impact of such operating parameters as pH, current intensity and, catalyst amount was investigated and the optimum conditions (100 mgL⁻¹ AO7, pH 3, 150 mgL⁻¹ CuFeO₂/CeO₂, I: 150 mA) determination led to 99.3% AO7 removal and 79.1% COD removal in 60 min. The introduction of CeO₂ as non-inert support had a significant impact on H₂O₂ electro-generation as an important step in AO7 removal. CuFeO₂/CeO₂ presented negligible metal leaching (iron 4.13%, copper 2.4%, and cerium 0.33%) which could be due to the strong interaction between active species and support. The nanocomposite performed efficiently in salty systems and two samples of real wastewaters due to Brønsted acidity character of ceria, which makes it a potential choice in industrial applications. The good performance of nanocomposite could be the result of the synergistic effect between Fe, Cu, and Ce. Regarding scavenging measurements results, the electro-Fenton process followed the Haber-Weiss mechanism. The by-products detection was performed using GC-MS analysis to propose an acceptable pathway for EF degradation of AO7. The BMG kinetics model (1/b = 0.969 (min) and 1/m = 0.269 (min⁻¹)) was matched with the experimental data and described the kinetics of reaction very well. The catalytic activity of CuFeO₂/CeO₂ almost remained after six cycles. Based on the obtained results, CuFeO₂/CeO₂ using the benefit of the synergistic effect of Ce³⁺ with Fe²⁺ and Cu⁺can be introduced as a promising novel catalyst for the electro-Fenton reaction in wastewater treatment.
Show more [+] Less [-]Stable-isotopic analysis and high-throughput pyrosequencing reveal the coupling process and bacteria in microaerobic and hypoxic methane oxidation coupled to denitrification
2019
Cao, Qin | Liu, Xiaofeng | Li, Na | Xie, Zhijie | Li, Zhidong | Li, Dong
Microaerobic and hypoxic methane oxidation coupled to denitrification (MAME-D and HYME-D) occur in stabilized landfills with leachate recirculation when biological denitrification is limited by lack of organics. To evaluate nitrate denitrification efficiency and culture MAME-D/HYME-D involved bacteria, a leach bed bioreactor semi-continuous experiment was conducted for 60 days in 5 runs, under nitrate concentrations ranging of 20 mg/L–55 mg/L, wherein 5% sterile leachate was added during runs 4 and 5. Although the HYME-D system demonstrated high denitrification efficiency (74.93%) and nitrate removal rate reached 2.62 mmol N/(L⋅d), the MAME-D system exhibited a denitrification efficiency of almost 100% and nitrate removal rate of 4.37 mmol N/(L⋅d). The addition of sterile leachate increased the nitrate removal rate in both systems, but caused the decrease of methane consumption in HYME-D. A stable isotope batch experiment was carried out to investigate the metabolic products by monitoring the 13CO2 and 15N2O production. The production of organic intermediates such as citrate, lactic acid, acetate, and propionic acid were also observed, which exhibited a higher yield in HYME-D. Variations in the microbial communities were analyzed during the semi-continuous experiment. MAME-D was mainly conducted by the association of type Ⅰ methanotroph Methylomonas and the methylotrophic denitrifier Methylotenera. Methane fermentation processed by Methylomonas under hypoxic conditions produced more complex organic intermediates and increased the diversity of related heterotrophic denitrifiers. The addition of sterile real leachate, resulting in increase of COD/N, influenced the microbial community of HYME-D system significantly.
Show more [+] Less [-]A multivariate approach of changes in filamentous, nitrifying and protist communities and nitrogen removal efficiencies during ozone dosage in a full-scale wastewater treatment plant
2019
Barbarroja, Paula | Zornoza, Andrés | Aguado, Daniel | Borrás, Luis | Alonso, José Luis
The application of low ozone dosage to minimize the problems caused by filamentous foaming was evaluated in two bioreactors of an urban wastewater treatment plant. Filamentous and nitrifying bacteria, as well as protist and metazoa, were monitored throughout a one-year period by FISH and conventional microscopy to examine the effects of ozone application on these specific groups of microorganisms. Multivariate data analysis was used to determine if the ozone dosage was a key factor determining the low carbon and nitrogen removal efficiencies observed throughout the study period, as well as to evaluate its impact on the biological communities monitored. The results of this study suggested that ozonation did not significantly affect the COD removal efficiency, although it had a moderate effect on ammonia removal efficiency. Filamentous bacteria were the community most influenced by ozone (24.9% of the variance explained by ozone loading rate), whilst protist and metazoa were less affected (11.9% of the variance explained). Conversely, ozone loading rate was not a factor in determining the nitrifying bacterial community abundance and composition, although this environmental variable was correlated with ammonia removal efficiency. The results of this study suggest that different filamentous morphotypes were selectively affected by ozone.
Show more [+] Less [-]Insights into long-term effects of amino-functionalized multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs-NH2) on the performance, enzymatic activity and microbial community of sequencing batch reactor
2019
Gao, Mengchun | Gao, Feng | Ma, Bingrui | Yu, Naling | She, Zonglian | Zhao, Changkun | Guo, Liang | Zhao, Yangguo | Li, Shanshan | Jin, Chunji
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) inevitably enter domestic sewage and industrial wastewater with the continuous increase of their production and application field. The potential effect of CNTs on biological wastewater treatment processes has raised wide concerns due to their biotoxicity. In the present study, the performance, microbial community and enzymatic activity of sequencing batch reactors (SBRs) were evaluated under 148-day exposure of amino-functionalized multi-walled CNTs (MWCNTs-NH₂) at 10 and 30 mg/L. The COD removal efficiency at 10 and 30 mg/L MWCNTs-NH₂ gradually reduced from 91.03% and 90.43% on day to 89.11% and 86.70% on day 148, respectively. The NH₄⁺-N removal efficiency at 10 and 30 mg/L MWCNTs-NH₂ gradually reduced from 98.98% and 98.46% on day 1 to 96.65% and 63.39% on day 148, respectively. Compared to 0 mg/L MWCNTs-NH₂, the oxygen-utilizing rate, ammonia-oxidizing rate, nitrite-oxidizing rate, nitrite-reducing rate and nitrate-reducing rate at 30 mg/L MWCNTs-NH₂ were decreased by 52.35%, 60.58%, 55.12%, 56.56% and 57.42% on day 148, respectively. The microbial reactive oxygen species and lactate dehydrogenase release on day 148 was increased by 59.71% and 55.28% at 30 mg/L MWCNTs-NH₂, respectively. The key microbial enzymatic activity related to nitrogen removal decreased with the increase of operation time under MWCNTs-NH₂ stress. The relative abundances of Nitrosomonas, Nitrosospira, Nitrospira and some denitrifying bacteria at 10 mg/L MWCNTs-NH₂ gradually reduced with an increment in operation time. The changes of nitrogen removal rate, microbial community and enzymatic activity of SBR were related to the time-cumulative nonlinear inhibition effect under long-term exposure.
Show more [+] Less [-]Spatial explicit management for the water sustainability of coupled human and natural systems
2019
Zhou, Xi-Yin
Linking water to research on coupled human and natural systems (CHANS) has attracted wide interest as a means of supporting human-natural sustainability. However, most current research does not focus on water environmental properties; instead, it is at the stage of holistic status assessment and measures adjustment from the point of view of the whole study region without revealing the dynamic interaction between human activities and natural processes. This paper establishes an integrated model that combines a System Dynamics model, a Cell Automaton model and a Multiagent Systems model and exploits the potential of the combined model to reveal regions' human-water interaction status during the process of urban evolution, identify the main pollution sources and spatial units, and provide the explicit space-time measurements needed to enhance local human-natural sustainability. The successful application of the integrated model in the case study of Changzhou City, China reveals the following. (1) As the city's development has progressed, the water environment status in some spatial units is still unsatisfactory and may even become more serious, especially in the urban areas of the Urban District and Liyang County. The concentration of Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) in monitoring section 157 of the Urban District has increased from 36.90 mg/l to 40.84 mg/l. The main source of this increase is the increase in secondary industry. (2) With the application of the spatially explicit measures of the sewage treatment ratio improvement and new sewage plant construction, the water quality in the urban area has significantly improved and now satisfies the water quality standards. The measure of livestock manure utilization enhancement is adopted to improve the spatial units in which livestock is the main pollution source and achieve the goal of water quality improvement. The model can be used to support the sustainable status assessment of human-water interaction and to identify effective measures that can be used to realize human-water sustainability along with social-economic development.
Show more [+] Less [-]A review on removing antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes from wastewater by constructed wetlands: Performance and microbial response
2019
Liu, Xiaohui | Guo, Xiaochun | Liu, Ying | Lu, Shaoyong | Xi, Beidou | Zhang, Jian | Wang, Zhi | Bi, Bin
Pollution caused by antibiotics has been highlighted in recent decades as a worldwide environmental and health concern. Compared to traditional physical, chemical and biological treatments, constructed wetlands (CWs) have been suggested to be a cost-efficient and ecological technology for the remediation of various kinds of contaminated waters. In this review, 39 antibiotics removal-related studies conducted on 106 treatment systems from China, Spain, Canada, Portugal, etc. were summarized. Overall, the removal efficiency of CWs for antibiotics showed good performance (average value = over 50%), especially vertical flow constructed wetlands (VFCWs) (average value = 80.44%). The removal efficiencies of sulfonamide and macrolide antibiotics were lower than those of tetracycline and quinolone antibiotics. In addition, the relationship between the removal efficiency of antibiotics and chemical oxygen demand (COD), total suspended solids (TSS), total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP) and ammonia nitrogen (NH₃-N) concentrations showed an inverted U-shaped curve with turning points of 300 mg L⁻¹, 57.4 mg L⁻¹, 40 mg L⁻¹, 3.2 mg L⁻¹ and 48 mg L⁻¹, respectively. The coexistence of antibiotics with nitrogen and phosphorus slightly reduced the removal efficiency of nitrogen and phosphorus in CWs. The removal effect of horizontal subsurface flow constructed wetlands for antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) had better performance (over 50%) than that of vertical wetlands, especially for sulfonamide resistance genes. Microorganisms are highly sensitive to antibiotics. In fact, microorganisms are one of the main responsible for antibiotic removal. Moreover, due to the selective pressure induced by antibiotics and drug-resistant gene transfer from resistant bacteria to other sensitive strains through their own genetic transfer elements, decreased microbial diversity and increased resistance in sewage have been consistently reported. This review promotes further research on the removal mechanism of antibiotics and ARGs in CWs.
Show more [+] Less [-]Cadmium (II) alters the microbial community structure and molecular ecological network in activated sludge system
2019
Wang, Xiaohui | Ya, Tao | Zhang, Minglu | Liu, Lin | Hou, Pengfei | Lu, Shaoyong
Cadmium (II) can potentially alter the microbial community structure and molecular ecological network in activated sludge systems. In this study, we used Illumina sequencing combined with an RMT-based network approach to show the response of the microbial community and its network structure to Cd (II) in activated sludge systems. The results demonstrated that 1 mg/L Cd (II) did not have chronic negative effects on chemical oxygen demand (COD) reduction and denitrification processes, but negatively affected the nitrification process and phosphorus removal. In contrast, 10 mg/L Cd (II) adversely affected both COD and nutrient removal, and reduced the microbial diversity and changed the overall microbial community structure. The relative abundances of Nitrosomonadaceae, Nitrospira, Accumulibacter and Acinetobacter, which are involved in nitrogen removal, significantly decreased with increases in the Cd (II) concentration. In addition, molecular ecological network analysis showed that the networks sizes in the presence of higher levels of Cd (II) were smaller than in the control, but the nodes were more closely connected with neighbors. These shifts in bacterial abundance and the bacterial network structure may be responsible for the deterioration of COD and nutrient removal. Overall, this study provides new insights into the effects of Cd (II) on the bacterial community and its interactions in activated sludge systems.
Show more [+] Less [-]Using scrap zero valent iron to replace dissolved iron in the Fenton process for textile wastewater treatment: Optimization and assessment of toxicity and biodegradability
2019
GilPavas, Edison | Correa-Sánchez, Santiago | Acosta, Diego A.
A Fenton like advanced oxidation process (AOP) employing scrap zerovalent iron (SZVI) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) was studied for industrial textile wastewater treatment from a textile manufacturing plant located at Medellín, Colombia (South America). The wastewater effluent studied contains a mixture of organic compounds resistant to conventional treatments. The effect of initial pH and SZVI concentration and H2O2 concentration were studied by a response surface methodology (RSM) Box-Behnken design of experiment (BBD). The combined SZVI/H2O2 process led to reductions of 95% color, 76% of chemical oxygen demand (COD) and 71% of total organic carbon (TOC) at optimal operating conditions of pH = 3, SZVI = 2000 mg/L and [H2O2] = 24.5 mM. Molecular weight distribution measurement (MWD), ultraviolet–visible (UV–Vis) spectroscopy, HPLC, biodegradability and toxicity were used to characterize the pollutants after the treatment process finding that the resulting effluent was polluted mostly by low molecular weight carboxylic acids. A remarkable biodegradability enhancement of the effluent was evidenced by a BOD5/COD ratio increase from 0.22 to 0.4; also, the SZVI/H2O2 process successfully reduced the toxicity from 60% to 20% of dead A. Salina crustaceans.
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