Co-occurrence and cooperation between comammox and anammox bacteria in a full-scale attached growth municipal wastewater treatment process

This article has 28 evaluations Published on
Read the full article Related papers
This article on Sciety

Abstract

Cooperation between comammox and anammox bacteria for nitrogen removal has been recently reported in laboratory-scale systems including synthetic community construct; however, there are no reports of full-scale municipal wastewater treatment systems with such cooperation. Here, we report intrinsic and extant kinetics as well as genome-resolved community characterization of a full-scale integrated fixed film activated sludge (IFAS) system where comammox and anammox bacteria co-occur and appear to drive nitrogen loss. Intrinsic batch kinetic assays indicated that majority of the aerobic ammonia oxidation was driven by comammox bacteria (1.75 ± 0.08 mg-N/g TS-h) in the attached growth phase with minimal contribution by ammonia oxidizing bacteria. Interestingly, a portion of total inorganic nitrogen (∼8%) was consistently lost during these aerobic assays. Aerobic nitrite oxidation assays eliminated the possibility of denitrification as a cause of nitrogen loss, while anaerobic ammonia oxidation assays resulted in rates consistent with anammox stoichiometry. Full-scale experiments at different dissolved oxygen (DO = 2-6 mg/L) set points indicated persistent nitrogen loss that was partly sensitive to DO concentrations. Genome-resolved metagenomics confirmed high abundance (relative abundance 6.53 ± 0.34%) of twoBrocadia-like anammox populations while comammox bacteria within theCa. Nitrospira nitrosa cluster were lower in abundance (0.37% ± 0.03%) andNitrosomonas-like ammonia oxidizers even lower (0.12% ± 0.02%). Collectively, our study reports for the first time the co-occurrence and co-operation of comammox and anammox bacteria in a full-scale municipal wastewater treatment system.

Synopsis

Comammox and anammox cooperation resulted in dissolved oxygen concentration dependent nitrogen loss in municipal wastewater treatment system.

Related articles

Related articles are currently not available for this article.