4.5 Article

Compared microbiology of granular sludge under autotrophic, mixotrophic and heterotrophic denitrification conditions

Journal

WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 59, Issue 6, Pages 1227-1236

Publisher

IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/wst.2009.092

Keywords

autotrophic denitrification; genetic library; granular sludge; heterotrophic denitrification; microbial biodiversity; UASB reactor

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia [CTM2006-04131/TECNO]
  2. Comunidad Autonoma de Madrid
  3. [NSF-0115851]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Water contamination by nitrate is a wideworld extended phenomena. Biological autotrophic denitrification has a real potential to face this problem and presents less drawbacks than the most extended heterotrophic denitrification. Three bench-scale UASB reactors were operated under autotrophic (R1, H2S as electron donor), mixotrophic (R2, H2S plus p-cresol as electron donors) and heterotrophic (R3, p-cresol as electron donor) conditions using nitrate as terminal electron acceptor. 16S rDNA genetic libraries were built up to compare their microbial biodiversity. Six different bacteria phyla and three archaeal classes were observed. Proteobacteria was the main phyla in all reactors standing out the presence of denitrifiers. Microorganisms similar to Thiobacillus denitrificans and Acidovorax sp. performed the autotrophic denitification. These OTUs were displaced by chemoheterotrophic denitrifiers, especially by Limnobacter-like and Ottowia-like OTUs. Other phyla were Bacteroidetes, Chloroflexi, Firmicutes and Actinobacteria that - as well as Archaea members - were implicated in the degradation of organic matter, as substrate added as coming from endogenous sludge decay under autotrophic conditions. Archaea diversity remained low in all the reactors being Methanosaeta concilii the most abundant one.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available