posted on 2016-06-23, 00:00authored byNicolette
A. Zhou, Heidi L. Gough
Discharge of trace organic contaminants
(TOrCs) from wastewater
treatment plants (WWTPs) may contribute to deleterious effects on
aquatic life. Release to the environment occurs both through WWTP
effluent discharge and runoff following land applications of biosolids.
This study introduces Enhanced Biological TOrC Removal (EBTCR), which
involves continuous bioaugmentation of TOrC-degrading bacteria for
improved removal in WWTPs. Influence of bioaugmentation on enhanced
degradation was investigated in two lab-scale sequencing batch reactors
(SBRs), using bisphenol A (BPA) as the TOrC. The reactors were operated
with 8 cycles per day and at two solids retention times (SRTs). Once
each day, the test reactor was bioaugmented with Sphingobium sp. BiD32, a documented BPA-degrading culture. After bioaugmentation,
BPA degradation (including both the dissolved and sorbed fractions)
was 2–4 times higher in the test reactor than in a control
reactor. Improved removal persisted for >5 cycles following bioaugmentation.
By the last cycle of the day, enhanced BPA removal was lost, although
it returned with the next bioaugmentation. A net loss of Sphingobium sp. BiD32 was observed in the reactors, supporting the original
hypothesis that continuous bioaugmentation (rather than single-dose
bioaugmentation) would be required to improve TOrCs removal during
wastewater treatment. This study represents a first demonstration
of a biologically based approach for enhanced TOrCs removal that both
reduces concentrations in wastewater effluent and prevents transfer
to biosolids.