4.7 Article

Occurrence of bacterial and viral fecal markers in municipal sewage sludge and their removal during sludge conditioning processes

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 310, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.114802

Keywords

Fecal contamination; Municipal sewage sludge; Conditioning treatment; Bacterial markers; Viral markers

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21976091]
  2. Qinglan high-level talent Project in Jiangsu Province

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This study aims to investigate the contamination of fecal bacterial and viral pathogens in municipal sewage sludge and the impact of sludge conditioning treatments on the distribution of fecal markers. The results show that serial tenfold dilution effectively reduces the PCR inhibition effect and negatively charged HA membrane is effective in recovering fecal markers from sludge supernatant. Furthermore, chemical conditioning with Fenton's reagent is more effective in reducing the abundances of fecal markers in conditioned sewage sludge. The findings suggest that appropriate conditioning methods can attenuate fecal markers and reduce associated environmental risks.
Fecal contamination in wastewater treatment system may pose severe threats to human health, but the detailed contamination of fecal bacterial and viral pathogens in municipal sewage sludge remains unclear. In addition, it is also unclear how sludge conditioning treatments would impact the distribution of fecal markers in conditioned sewage sludge. Before addressing these two issues, the possible polymerase chain reaction (PCR) inhibition effect when determining the abundances of fecal markers in both sludge solids and sludge supernatants should be solved, and methods of effectively concentrating fecal markers from sludge supernatant should also be developed. In the present study, we found that the serial tenfold dilution effectively reduced the PCR inhibition effect when determining the abundances of fecal markers including cross-assembly phages (CrAssphage), JC polyomavirus (JCPyV), human-specific HF183 bacteroides (HF183), human BK polyomavirus (BKPyV), human adenovirus (HAdV) and Escherichia coli (EC), while the utilization of negatively charged HA membrane was effective to recover fecal markers from sludge supernatant. The results of a six-month monitoring revealed that gene markers of CrAssphage, JCPyV, HF183, BKPyV, HAdV, and EC can be detected in municipal sewage sludge collected from a local wastewater treatment plant. Among the investigated four chemical conditioning methods, i.e., chemical conditioning with polyacrylamide (PAM), Fe[III]/CaO, or Fenton's reagent, and chemical acidification conditioning, chemical conditioning with Fenton's reagent was much more effective than the other three conditioning methods to reduce the abundances of fecal markers in the supernatant and solid of conditioned sewage sludge. Furthermore, the investigated fecal markers in the conditioned sewage sludge can be simultaneously attenuated by employing suitable conditioning methods, consequently reducing the associated environmental risks.

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