Eutrophication How do we treat sewage? CholeraFood ... · When plants are used it ... automobile...

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Environmental microbiology • Sewage treatment • Bioremediation • Microbes and climate change Why do we treat sewage? • Avoid drinking water contamination • Avoid food contamination • Avoid ecological damage via eutrophication Sewage treatment Cholera Caused by Vibrio cholerae V. cholerae is gram(-) rod, salt tolerant, acid sensitive Virulence determined by bacteriaphage Produces exotoxin that interferes with intestinal water balance Toxin is destroyed by heating History of cholera John Snow (1813-1858) Hospital Doctor magazine’s “greatest doctor” of all time Drinking water contamination Food contamination Meat, dairy, shellfish become reservoirs for pathogens and account for 90% of US foodborne disease (Bacillus cereus, Clostridium, Shigella, Staphylococcus, Listeria, Yersinia, Aeromonas) Sewage-contaminated water/fertilizer sprayed on vegetable crops get have caused food poisoning outbreaks (E. coli 0157:H7, Cyclospora, Toxoplasma, Cryptosporidium, Campylobacter, Salmonella) Sewage treatment Eutrophication Sewage treatment How do we treat sewage? Sewage treatment plants in U.S. use a series of two processes as mandated by the Clean Water Act of 1972. Primary Treatment: a physical process Secondary treatment : a microbial process Goal: reduce the BOD (Biochemical Oxygen Demand) How much oxygen would be needed to decompose the water’s organic waste? Basically, an index of contamination Sewage treatment

Transcript of Eutrophication How do we treat sewage? CholeraFood ... · When plants are used it ... automobile...

Page 1: Eutrophication How do we treat sewage? CholeraFood ... · When plants are used it ... automobile exhaust Methane Ð wetlands, ... Sources of nitrous oxide Climate change Microbes

Environmental microbiology

• Sewage treatment

• Bioremediation

• Microbes and climate change

Why do we treat sewage?

• Avoid drinking water contamination

• Avoid food contamination

• Avoid ecological damage viaeutrophication

Sewage treatment

Cholera• Caused by Vibrio cholerae

• V. cholerae is gram(-) rod, salt tolerant, acid sensitive

• Virulence determined by bacteriaphage

• Produces exotoxin that interferes with intestinal waterbalance

• Toxin is destroyed by heating

History of choleraJohn Snow

(1813-1858) Hospital Doctor magazine’s “greatest doctor” of all time

Drinking water contamination

Food contamination

• Meat, dairy, shellfish become reservoirs forpathogens and account for 90% of USfoodborne disease (Bacillus cereus, Clostridium, Shigella,

Staphylococcus, Listeria, Yersinia, Aeromonas)

• Sewage-contaminated water/fertilizer sprayedon vegetable crops get have caused foodpoisoning outbreaks (E. coli 0157:H7, Cyclospora,

Toxoplasma, Cryptosporidium, Campylobacter, Salmonella)

Sewage treatment

Eutrophication

Sewage treatment

How do we treat sewage?

Sewage treatment plants in U.S. use a series of twoprocesses as mandated by

the Clean Water Act of 1972.

• Primary Treatment: a physical process

• Secondary treatment: a microbial process

Goal: reduce the BOD (Biochemical Oxygen Demand)How much oxygen would be needed to decompose the water’s organic waste?

Basically, an index of contamination

Sewage treatment

Page 2: Eutrophication How do we treat sewage? CholeraFood ... · When plants are used it ... automobile exhaust Methane Ð wetlands, ... Sources of nitrous oxide Climate change Microbes

Primary treatment

• Raw sewage is passed through series of screens

• The sewage is allowed to settle in the “sedimentationtank” yielding sludge

• This process typically removes 50% of the solids and25% of the BOD.

Treatment via GRAVITY

Sewage treatmentSecondary treatment

• Naturally occurring and inoculated microbes oxidizeorganic material into CO2

• Aerobic conditions must be maintained via mixing inan “aerator”

• Oxidation is greatly enhanced by formation of biofilms

Biofilms/Flocs=Micro-organisms living in communities suspended in liquid-ishenvironments attached to surfaces (sometimes gravel)

• This process can remove as much as 95% of the BOD

Treatment via MICROBIAL ACTIVITY

Sewage treatment

Lagoons: Sewage is channeled into shallowponds. Algae and cyanobacteria provide O2 forthe aerobic organisms in the pond to degradethe sewage.

Artificial Wetlands: Similar to lagoons exceptthey provide a habitat for birds and otherwildlife (Figure 31.3).

Other secondary treatment processes

Sewage treatment

…leftovers?

Effluvent: liquid from 2° treatmenthigh in nitrates and phosphorus

*Sterilized by UV, ozone, or chlorine*

By now pathogens have usually been entirely removedby competition by sewage-adapted organisms!!

Sludge: solids from 1° & 2° treatmentWarning: may contain heavy metals & pollutants!

*Processed by “digestion”*

Sewage treatment

• Nitrates removed by denitrification

• Phosphates removed either chemicallyor microbially, but both result inprecipitation of phosphates out ofsolution

Tertiary treatment of Effluent

2NO3- + 5H2 + 2H+ N2

+ 6H2O + EnergyNitrate Dinitrogen Gas

Sewage treatment

Digestion of sludgereactions in digestion:

organic compounds organic acids + CO2 + H2

organic acids acetate + CO2 + H2

acetate + CO2 + H2 CH4

(note: ANAEROBIC!!)

The result is a nutrient-rich product called stabilizedsludge. It can be burned, disposed of in landfills, or

used as a fertilizer.

Sewage treatment

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Sewage treatment overview

Sewage treatment

Overview:

Bioremediation: the use of living organisms,such as bacteria and fungi, to degrade ordetoxify pollutants. When plants are used itis called phytoremediation.

Bioremediation is most often attempted in:landfills, soils, aquifers, wetlands, and oil spills

Bioremediation

1) molecular form

2) pH

3) nutrient availability

4) temperature

5) moisture

6) O2 concentrations

7) microbial community/ecology

8) other chemicals

Factors effecting pollutant breakdown:

Bioremediation

Important term 1: Xenobiotics

• Synthetic compounds that are totallydifferent from any that occur in nature.

• They can be harder to get rid ofbecause there aren’t organisms thathave evolved to degrade them.

• Enter genetic engineering!!

Bioremediation

Important term 2: co-metabolism

• Some pollutants are degraded “by accident” bymicrobes trying to degrade something else.

• Microbes produce enzymes to degrade substrates inorder to survive. If the enzyme is general enough, itwill degrade other molecules as well. This is co-metabolism.

• If you provide more of the substrate the microbe isattempting to degrade, you can accelerate thebreakdown of the pollutant.

Bioremediation

Two main bioremediationstrategies:

1) Biostimulation: enhancing the growth ofalready-present microbes by providing themwhat they are limited by (e.g. nutrients,oxygen)

2) Bioaugmentation: adding organisms thatwere not already present

Example: marine oil spills

Bioremediation

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Example: TCE breakdown

•TCE (trichloroethylene) is a majorpollutant from electronic components(transformers)

•No known microbes use TCE as aprimary substrate

Bioremediation

•But toluene ortho-monooxygenase enzyme iswidespread in nature andcan co-metabolize TCE

Magic bullet, right? Well…

• “parent” compounds can be broken down intosomething worse

• Some chemicals cannot be degraded

• Heavy metals and high levels of toxins caninhibit desired microbial activity

• Few large-scale success stories usingbioaugmentation in polluted natural systems

• Releasing recombinant microbes: a potentialcan of worms…

Bioremediation

Environmental microbiologyand global climate change

Sources of our majorgreenhouse gases:

Carbon dioxide – soilrespiration, fossil fuelburning, biomass burning

Nitrous oxide – sewagetreatment, N-based fertilizers,automobile exhaust

Methane – wetlands, livestock,rice cultivation, garbagedecomposition, drilling for oil& natural gas

Flurocarbons -- refrigerants

Climate change

Relative significance of greenhouse gases

35-10,0000.3 / 3,000-15,000Fluorocarbons

1140.1 / 206N2O

120.5 / 21CH4

variable1.56 / 1CO2

Atmosphericlifetime (years)

Radiative forcing *Compound

*first number is total atmospheric radiative forcing (W/m2), the second number is aper molecule forcing strength relative to CO2

Climate change

Global carbon dioxideconcentration is on the rise

Climate change

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Carbon dioxide sources &sinks

100Deep ocean “removal”

100Deep ocean “burial”

90Ocean respiration

90Ocean photosynthesis

60Soil respiration

60Plant Respiration

120Photosynthesis

Size (GtC/year) *Flux

*(-) means a flux out of the atmosphere, (+) means a flux into the atmosphere

The only natural systemthat is not in equilibrium(I.e. can affect carbonbalance) is theterrestrial ecosystem.Recent large-scalestudies show that soilrespiration is muchmore mutable thaneither photosynthesis orplant respiration.

Climate change

So what happens to soil respirationunder global warming?

• Models predict greatest warming at the poles

• The arctic contains 40% of the world’s soilcarbon frozen as permafrost

• When temperatures increase, permafrostmelts, and metabolic rates increase slightly,increasing soil respiration, increasing CO2 inthe atmosphere, increasing warming??!!

Climate change

Methane sources

Climate change

Nitrous oxide

• Denitrification is a two-step process. N2O isreleased whenever the second step is blockedor slow.

•N2O is also producedduring biomass burningand by soils after a burn

•N2O concentrations inthe atmosphere hasincreased by more than15% since 1750

Climate change

Sources of nitrous oxide

Climate change

Microbes and global change insummary:

• Microbes are a major natural (and stimulated)source of most greenhouse gases.

• Careful measurements of microbial gas emissionsare vital for predicting global climate.

• Microbial emission rates increase with the effectsof human land-use change, livestock, modernagriculture practice, waste production, andbiomass burning. All are secondary effects ofhuman overpopulation.

Climate change