Temporal bacterial community changes in river biofilms were studied using 16S rRNA gene-based polymerase chain reaction-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) followed by sequence analysis. Naturally occurring biofilms were sampled in 2001 during an undisturbed 7-month low-water period in the River Garonne (SW France). During the sampling period epilithic biomass exhibited a particular pattern: two 3-month periods of accumulation that resulted in two peaks in summer and fall, each at about 25 g ash-free dry mass per square meter. Bacterial community DGGE profiles differed between the summer and fall biomass peaks and shared only 30% common operational taxonomic units (OTUs), suggesting the influence of seasonal factors on these communities. During the second biomass accrual phase, bacterial richness and the appearance of new OTUs fitted a conceptual model of bacterial biofilm succession. During succession, five OTUs (corresponding to Dechloromonas sp., Nitrospira sp., and three different Spirosoma spp.) exhibited particular patterns and were present only during clearly defined successional stages, suggesting differences in life-history strategies for epilithic bacteria. Co-inertia analysis of DGGE banding patterns and physical-chemical data showed a significant relationship between community structure and environmental conditions suggesting that bacterial communities were mainly influenced by seasonal changes (temperature, light) and hydrodynamic stability. Within the periods of stability, analysis of environmental variables and community patterns showed the dominant influence of time and maturation on bacterial community structure. Thus, succession in these naturally occurring epilithic biofilm assemblages appears to occur through a combination of allogenic (seasonal) and autogenic changes.
Limitations of oxygen transfer in fermentation can be solved using auxiliary liquids immiscible in the aqueous phase. The liquids (called oxygen-vectors) used in this study were hydrocarbon (n-dodecane) and perfluorocarbon (forane F66E) in which oxygen is highly soluble (54.9 mg/L in n-dodecane and 118 mg/L in forane F66E at 35 degrees C in contact with air at atmospheric pressure). It has been demonstrated that the use of n-dodecane emulsion in a culture of Aerobacter aerogenes enabled a 3. 5-fold increase of the volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient(k(L)a) calculated on a per-liter aqueous phase basis. The droplet size of the vector played a crucial role in the phenomena. When a static contact between gas bubble and vector droplet was established in water, the vector covered the bubble, in agreement with positive values of the spreading coefficient for these fluids. The determination of the oxygen transfer coefficients (k(L)) in a reactor with a definite interfacial area enabled the main resistance to be located in the boundary layer of the waterside either for a gas-water or a vector-water interface. Because oxygen consumption by weakly hydrophobic cells can only occur in the aqueous phase, the oxygen transfer is achieved according to the following pathway: gas-vector-water-cell. Finally, a mechanism for oxygen transfer within this four-phased system is proposed.
With new EEC regulations, alternative treatment and disposal techniques of the excess sludge produced by Activated Sludge (AS) wastewater treatment plants have to be performed. In order to reduce the excess sludge produced, experiments have been carried out with a Membrane BioReactor (MBR) to study the maintenance and cryptic growth phenomena of Pseudomonas fluorescens culture taken as a model when grown on a limiting substrate complex medium similar to a synthetic urban wastewater. Experiments with various imposed wasting rates showed that viability and sludge production yield decreased when sludge age increased. Same variations were observed on the cell content ratio protein/polysaccharide by analysis of the cell lysis products released after discontinuous thermal treatment. Biomass growth on these cell lysis products was achieved to characterize cryptic growth and its impact on sludge production yield. Finally, a continuous sludge thermal treatment system was operating with MBR to amplify sludge breakage and consequently biomass growth on the lysis products. With the promising results obtained, this work gives a new outlook on the AS process and leads to the development of processes with control and reduction of sludge production.
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