4.7 Article

Influence of salinity cycles in bioreactor performance and microbial community structure of membrane-based tidal-like variable salinity wastewater treatment systems

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 514-527

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-018-3608-4

Keywords

Membrane bioreactor; Moving bed membrane bioreactor; Salinity wastewater; Eukarya; Prokarya; Oligotyping

Funding

  1. Institute of Water Research
  2. Department of Civil Engineering in the University of Granada
  3. Ministry of Economy and Competitivity of the Government of Spain [CTM2013-48154-P, BES-2014-067852]

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A membrane bioreactor and two hybrid moving bed bioreactor-membrane bioreactors were operated for the treatment of variable salinity wastewater, changing in cycles of 6-h wastewater base salinity and 6-h maximum salinity (4.5 and 8.5mScm(-1) electric conductivity, which relate to 2.4 and 4.8gL(-1) NaCl, respectively), under different hydraulic retention times (6, 9.5, and 12h) and total solids concentrations (2500 and 3500mgL(-1)). The evaluation of the performance of the systems showed that COD removal performance was unaffected by salinity conditions, while BOD5 and TN removals were significantly higher in the low-salinity scenario. The microbial community structure showed differences with respect to salinity conditions for Eukarya, suggesting their higher sensitivity for salinity with respect to Prokarya, which were similar at both salinity scenarios. Nevertheless, the intra-OTU distribution of consistently represented OTUs of Eukarya and Prokarya was affected by the different salinity maximums. Multivariate redundancy analyses showed that several genera such as Amphiplicatus (0.01-5.90%), Parvibaculum (0.27-1.19%), Thiothrix (0.30-1.19%), Rhodanobacter (2.81-5.85%), Blastocatella (0.21-2.01%), and Nitrobacter (0.80-0.99%) were positively correlated with BOD5 and TN removal, and the ecological roles of these were proposed. All these genera were substantially more represented under low-salinity conditions (10-500% higher relative abundance), demonstrating that they might be of importance for the treatment of variable salinity wastewater. Evaluation of Eukarya OTUs showed that many of them lack a consistent taxonomic classification, which highlights the lack of knowledge of the diversity and ecological role of Eukaryotes in saline wastewater treatment processes. The results obtained will be of interest for future design and operation of salinity wastewater treatment systems particularly because little is known on the effect of variable salinity conditions in wastewater treatment.

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