Importance of Species Sorting and Immigration on the Bacterial Assembly of Different-Sized Aggregates in a Full-Scale Aerobic Granular Sludge Plant

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

Muhammad Ali (King Abdullah University of Science and Technology)

Zhongwei Wang (King Abdullah University of Science and Technology)

Khaled W. Salam (University of Washington)

Ananda Rao Hari (King Abdullah University of Science and Technology)

M Pronk (TU Delft - BT/Environmental Biotechnology)

Mark M.C. van Loosdrecht (TU Delft - BT/Environmental Biotechnology)

Pascal Saikaly (King Abdullah University of Science and Technology)

Research Group
BT/Environmental Biotechnology
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.8b07303
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Research Group
BT/Environmental Biotechnology
Issue number
14
Volume number
53
Pages (from-to)
8291-8301

Abstract

In aerobic granular sludge (AGS) systems, different-sized microbial aggregates having different solids retention time (SRT) coexist in the same reactor compartment and are subjected to the same influent wastewater. Thus, the AGS system provides a unique ecosystem to study the importance of local (species sorting) and regional (immigration) processes in bacterial community assembly. The microbial communities of different-sized aggregates (flocs <0.2 mm, small granules (0.2-1.0 mm) and large granules >1.0 mm), influent wastewater, excess sludge and effluent of a full-scale AGS plant were characterized over a steady-state operation period of 6 months. Amplicon sequencing was integrated with mass balance to determine the SRT and net growth rate of operational taxonomic units (OTUs). We found strong evidence of species sorting as opposed to immigration, which was significantly higher at short SRT (i.e., flocs and small granules) than that at long SRT (large granules). Rare OTUs in wastewater belonging to putative functional groups responsible for nitrogen and phosphorus removal were progressively enriched with an increase in microbial aggregates size. In contrast, fecal- and sewage infrastructure-derived microbes progressively decreased in relative abundance with increase in microbial aggregate size. These findings highlight the importance of AGS as a unique model ecosystem to study fundamental microbial ecology concepts.

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