| Literature DB >> 27183209 |
Francis A Meerburg1, Siegfried E Vlaeminck2, Hugo Roume1, Dries Seuntjens1, Dietmar H Pieper3, Ruy Jauregui3, Ramiro Vilchez-Vargas1, Nico Boon4.
Abstract
High-rate activated sludge processes allow for the recovery of organics and energy from wastewaters. These systems are operated at a short sludge retention time and high sludge-specific loading rates, which results in a higher sludge yield and better digestibility than conventional, low-rate activated sludge. Little is known about the microbial ecology of high-rate systems. In this work, we address the need for a fundamental understanding of how high-rate microbial communities differ from low-rate communities. We investigated the high-rate and low-rate communities in a sewage treatment plant in relation to environmental and operational variables over a period of ten months. We demonstrated that (1) high-rate and low-rate communities are distinctly different in terms of richness, evenness and composition, (2) high-rate community dynamics are more variable and less shaped by deterministic factors compared to low-rate communities, (3) sub-communities of continuously core and transitional members are more shaped by deterministic factors than the continuously rare members, both in high-rate and low-rate communities, and (4) high-rate community members showed a co-occurrence pattern similar to that of low-rate community members, but were less likely to be correlated to environmental and operational variables. These findings provide a basis for further optimization of high-rate systems, in order to facilitate resource recovery from wastewater.Entities:
Keywords: A-stage; AB-system; Co-occurrence network analysis; Energy-neutral sewage treatment; Resource recovery
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27183209 DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2016.04.076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Water Res ISSN: 0043-1354 Impact factor: 11.236