Abstract
Effects of bioaugmentation of the composite microbial culture CES-1 on a full scale textile dye wastewater treatment process were investigated in terms of water quality, sludge reduction, dynamics of microbial community structures and their functional genes responsible for degradation of azo dye, and other chemicals. The removal efficiencies for Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD), Total Nitrogen (T-N), Total Phosphorus (T-P), Suspended Solids (SS), and color intensity (96.4%, 78.4, 83.1, 84.4, and 92.0, respectively) 300–531 days after the augmentation were generally improved after bioaugmentation. The denitrification linked to T-N removal appeared to contribute to the concomitant COD removal that triggered a reduction of sludge (up to 22%) in the same period of augmentation. Azo dye and aromatic compound degradation and other downstream pathways were highly metabolically interrelated. Augmentation of CES-1 increased microbial diversity in the later stages of augmentation when a strong microbial community selection of Acinetobacterparvus, Acinetobacterjohnsonii, Marinobacter manganoxydans, Verminephrobacter sp., and Arcobacter sp. occurred. Herein, there might be a possibility that the CES-1 augmentation could facilitate the indigenous microbial community successions so that the selected communities made the augmentation successful. The metagenomic analysis turned out to be a reasonable and powerful tool to provide with new insights and useful biomarkers for the complex environmental conditions, such as the full scale dye wastewater treatment system undergoing bioaugmentation.
Funder
National Research Foundation of Korea
Subject
Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology
Cited by
7 articles.
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