Abstract

A petrochemical wastewater treatment plant (PWWTP) was selected to investigate the distribution and removal of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and three forms of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), namely intracellular ARGs (iARGs), adsorbed-extracellular ARGs (aeARGs), and free extracellular ARGs (feARGs). Tetracycline, sulfanilamide, and ampicillin ARB were detected with the total absolute concentration of 8.45×102-2.38×105 CFU·mL-1; the absolute concentrations of three types of ARB decreased by 0.04 lg-0.21 lg through anaerobic treatment. The effect of aeration and precipitation treatment on ARB varies with its type, and the absolute concentration of ARB in effluent was 0.12 lg-0.63 lg higher than that in influent. The absolute abundance of aeARGs and iARGs in activated sludge was 1.96×107-3.02×1010 copies·g-1 and 5.22×107-4.15×1010 copies·g-1, respectively; the absolute abundance of feARGs in wastewater was 5.90×108-1.01×1012 copies·L-1. Anaerobic treatment can remove 0.13 lg-0.65 lg aeARGs and 0.04 lg-0.28 lg iARGs, while the removal efficiency of aeARGs and iARGs by aeration and precipitation process was affected by ARGs types and forms. The absolute abundance of feARGs in effluent is 0.06 lg-0.81 lg higher than that in influent. Redundancy analysis showed that the concentration of ARB was significantly positively correlated with chemical oxygen demand (COD), Cl-, and total nitrogen concentration (P<0.05). The abundance of aeARGs was positively correlated with COD and total nitrogen concentration (P<0.05), and both the abundance of iARGs and feARGs are positively correlated with heavy metals concentration (P<0.05). This study confirmed the enrichment risk of ARB and different forms of ARGs in PWWTPs, which provided references for the research and prevention of antibiotic resistance pollution in industrial wastewater.

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