Dynamics of archaeal and bacterial communities in response to variations of hydraulic retention time in an integrated anaerobic fluidized-bed membrane bioreactor treating benzothiazole wastewater

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Abstract

An integrated anaerobic fluidized-bed membrane bioreactor (IAFMBR) was investigated to treat synthetic high-strength benzothiazole wastewater (50 mg/L) at a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 24, 18, and 12 h. The chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal efficiency (from 93.6% to 90.9%), the methane percentage (from 70.9% to 69.27%), and the methane yield (from 0.309 m 3 CH 4 /kg·COD removed to 0.316 m 3 CH 4 /kg·COD removed ) were not affected by decreasing HRTs. However, it had an adverse effect on membrane fouling (decreasing service period from 5.3 d to 3.2 d) and benzothiazole removal efficiency (reducing it from 97.5% to 82.3%). Three sludge samples that were collected on day 185, day 240, and day 297 were analyzed using an Illumina® MiSeq platform. It is striking that the dominant genus of archaea was always Methanosaeta despite of HRTs. The proportions of Methanosaeta were 80.6% (HRT 24), 91.9% (HRT 18), and 91.2% (HRT 12). The dominant bacterial genera were Clostridium in proportions of 23.9% (HRT 24), 16.4% (HRT 18), and 15.3% (HRT 12), respectively.

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Li, Y., Hu, Q., & Gao, D. W. (2018). Dynamics of archaeal and bacterial communities in response to variations of hydraulic retention time in an integrated anaerobic fluidized-bed membrane bioreactor treating benzothiazole wastewater. Archaea, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/9210534

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