Abstract

The textile industry generates significant amounts of wastewater containing high concentrations of azo dyes. An important point in the process of purification of azo dyes is their influence on the activated sludge (AS) in wastewater treatment plants. Azo dyes, such as amaranth, play the role of xenobiotics. This article seeks to answer the question of how organisms manage to respond to xenobiotics remains very important and open, i.e., how they will react to toxic conditions. The aim of this research was to study how these changes are expressed in terms of the different trophic levels of AS. In our experiment, it was found that the dominant trophic units are significantly changed due to the xenobiotic entering the system. The data reveal the significant development of the bacterial segment (genusPseudomonasand azo-degrading bacteria) at times of large amaranth removal. In the most active phase of amaranth biodetoxification (48h), the culturable bacteria of the genus Pseudomonas change by about 40%, while the azo-degrading bacteria change by about 2%. Fauna organisms have a sharp change in the dominant groups-from attached and crawling ciliates and testate amoebas to the mass development of small and large flagellates. This is of great importance because micro- and metafauna play an important role in the detoxification process by ingesting some of the xenobiotics. This role is expressed in the fact that after dying, macro-organisms release this xenobiotic in small portions so that it can then be effectively degraded by adapting to the amaranth biodegradation bacteria. In this study, it is clear that all these events lead to a decline in the quality of AS. But on the other hand, these allow AS to survive as a microbial community, and the fauna segment does not disappear completely.

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