With global eutrophication and increasingly stringent
nitrogen
discharge restrictions, dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) holds considerable
potential to upgrade advanced wastewater denitrification because of
its large contribution to low-nitrogen effluents and stronger stimulation
effect for algae. Here, we show that DON from the postdenitrification
systems dominates effluent eutrophication potential under different
carbon sources. Methanol resulted in significantly lower DON concentrations
(0.84 ± 0.03 mg/L) compared with the total nitrogen removal-preferred
acetate (1.11 ± 0.02 mg/L) (p < 0.05, ANOVA).
With our well-developed mathematical model (R2 = 0.867–0.958), produced DON instead of shared (persist
in both influent and effluent) and/or removed DON was identified as
the key component for effluent DON variation (Pearson r = 0.992, p < 0.01). The partial least-squares
path modeling analysis showed that it is the microbial community (r = 0.947, p < 0.01) rather than the
predicted metabolic functions (r = 0.040, p > 0.1) that affected produced DON. Carbon sources rebuild
the microorganism–DON interaction by affecting the structure
of microbial communities with different abilities to generate and
recapture produced DON to finally regulate effluent DON. This study
revalues the importance of carbon source selection and overturns the
current rationality of pursuing only the total nitrogen removal efficiency
by emphasizing DON.