Description
ln order to improve biological reactors operation and design it is important to study the effects of changes in process parameters with regard to the microbial community structure and, vice versa, the effects of community structure and dynamics on the reactors performance. Two biofilm reactors operated with hydraulic retention times of 1 h and 6 h were used to study the links between population dynamics and reactor operation performance during a shift in process operation from pure
ammonia oxidation to combined organic carbon and ammonia oxidation, under oxygen limiting conditions. During the entire experimental period both reactors received identical ammonium and organic carbon loads. The composition of lhe microbial consortia in both reaclors was quantified with rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes combined with fluorescence in situ hybridization, confocal laser scanning
microscopy, and digital image analysis. Furthermore, finescale diversity analyses or ammonia-oxidizers in both reactors were performed using the gene (amoA) encoding the catalytic subunit or the ammonia-monooxygenase enzyme as a marker.
The observed population dynamics (microscale phenomena) correlated well with the nitrification perforrnance of the reactors and biofilm parameters like thickness and mass 77 concentration (macroscale phenomena). The decrease in nitrification, efficiency after acetate addition was more drastic in the reactor operated with 6 h retention time due to the unexpected formation of a thicker heterotrophic layer on top of the nitrifying biofilm that increased the resistance to oxygen mass transfer and the nitrifiers
became oxygen Iimited. This fact can probably be
explained by the decrease in the shear forces acting in the biofilm caused by the increase in the liquid phase viscosity due to the higher growth of suspended heterotrophic bacteria observed in that reactor.