4.7 Article

Effects of oxygen and carbon content on nitrogen removal capacities in landfill bioreactors and response of microbial dynamics

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 100, Issue 14, Pages 6427-6434

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-016-7460-5

Keywords

Microbial community structure; Nitrogen pathways; High-throughput sequencing; Landfill leachate treatment

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [31370510, 21577038, 313111197]
  2. East China Normal University: outstanding doctoral dissertation cultivation plan of action [PY2015034]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this study, landfill bioreactors were tested to treat the recalcitrant leachate-nitrogen and the impacts of relevant operational parameters on its conversion were comprehensively investigated. We found that the highly diverse microbial community in landfill bioreactors could be substantially affected by increasing biodegradable carbon and oxygen content, which led to the whole system's intrinsic nitrogen removal capacity increasing from 50 to 70 %, and meanwhile, the contribution of anammox was detected less than 20 %. The sequencing and q-PCR results showed that microbial community in bioreactor was dominated by Proteobacteria (similar to 35 %) and Acidobacteria (similar to 20 %) during the whole experiment. The abundance of anammox functioning bacteria (Amx) kept at a stable level (-2.5 to -2.2 log (copies/16S rRNA)) and was not statistically correlated to the abundance of anammox bacteria. However, significant linear correlation (p < 0.05) was determined between the abundance of nirS and Proteobacteria; amoA and AOB. Redundancy analysis (RDA) suggested that although oxygen and biodegradable carbon can both impose effects on microbial community structure, only biodegradable carbon content is the determinant in the total nitrogen removal.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available