Abstract

The lack of anammox seeds is regarded as the bottleneck of anammox-based processes. Although the interactions in anammox consortia have attracted increasing attention, little is known about the influence of inoculated sludge populations on the growth of anammox bacteria. In this study, four sludge of distinct communities mixed with anammox sludge (the relative abundance of Ca. Kuenenia was 1.96 %) were used as the seeds, respectively for the start-up of anammox processes. Notably, all these mixed microbial communities tend to form a similar microbial community, defined as the anammox core, containing anammox-bacteria (22.9 ± 5.9 %), ammonia-oxidizing-bacteria (0.8 ± 0.7 %), nitrite-oxidizing-bacteria (0.2 ± 0.2 %), Chloroflexi-bacteria (0.7 ± 0.4 %), and heterotrophic-denitrification-bacteria (0.3 ± 0.2 %). It also elucidated that the communities of Nitrosomonas-dominated sludge were the closest to the anammox core, and achieved the highest nitrogen-removal rate of 0.73 kg-N m−3 d−1. This study sheds light on the solution to the shortage of anammox seeds in the full-scale wastewater treatment application.

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