Abstract

The preservation of anaerobic ammonia oxidation (anammox) consortia is crucial for the rapid start-up and the process stability of the anammox based bioreactor. This work proposed and evaluated the feasibility of an anammox consortia preservation strategy, in which the anammox sludge was transformed into intermediate anoxic sulfide oxidation (ASO) functional microorganisms. Initially, the ASO process was successfully started up by inoculating anammox sludge and the overall sulfide and nitrate removal rates stabilized at 57.5 ± 0.22 and 10.0 ± 0.18 kg m−3 day−1, respectively. Then, the bioreactor function was reversely transformed into anammox, whose nitrogen removal rate reached 1.68 kg m−3 day−1. Granule characteristics analysis revealed that both biomass and extracellular polymeric substance content returned to their original states after the reverse start-up. Although the population of Candidatus_Kuenenia was greatly declined during ASO process, its richness was successfully recovered after the reverse start-up of the anammox process. The inferred metagenomes analysis demonstrated that the shifts in functional microorganisms were related to variation in the main metabolic pathways. The specific activities of anammox and ASO both are regarded as key indicators for the successful start-up of bioreactor. This work revealed a novel technique for the preservation of anammox consortia and might be a potential strategy for overcoming the drawback of long start-up time.

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