4.8 Article

Bacterial Community Structure in Geographically Distributed Biological Wastewater Treatment Reactors

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 19, Pages 7391-7396

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es101554m

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National high technology research and development program
  2. National natural science foundation
  3. Water pollution control of China [2008ZX07208-001003]
  4. China Scholarship Council
  5. UC Mexus program
  6. Taiwan

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Current knowledge of the microbial communities within biological wastewater treatment reactors is incomplete due to limitations of traditional culture-based techniques and despite the emergence of recently applied molecular techniques. Here we demonstrate the application of high-density microarrays targeting universal 16S rRNA genes to evaluate microbial community composition in five biological wastewater treatment reactors in China and the United States. Results suggest a surprisingly consistent composition of microbial community structure among all five reactors. All investigated communities contained a core of bacterial phyla (53-82% of 2119 taxa identified) with almost identical compositions las determined by colinearity analysis). These core species were distributed widely in terms of abundance but their proportions were virtually the same in all samples. Proteobacteria was the largest phylum and Firmicutes, Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes were the subdominant phyla. The diversity among the samples can be attributed solely to a group of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) that were detected only in specific samples. Typically, these organisms ranked somewhat lower in terms of abundance but a few were present is much higher proportions.

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