Concentrated turtle aquaculture effluent poses an environmental threat to water bodies, and therefore needs to be treated prior to disposal. This study was conducted to assess the effect of multi-soil-layer(MSL) sys...Concentrated turtle aquaculture effluent poses an environmental threat to water bodies, and therefore needs to be treated prior to disposal. This study was conducted to assess the effect of multi-soil-layer(MSL) systems treating turtle aquaculture effluent with adding different amounts of sludge. Four MSL systems were constructed with dry weight ratios of sludge with 0%, 5%, 10%, and 20%(MSL 1, MSL 2, MSL 3, and MSL 4, respectively). The turtle aquaculture effluent had an average chemical oxygen demand(COD), ammonia nitrogen(NH4^+-N) and total nitrogen(TN) concentration of 288.4, 213.4, and 252.0 mg/L, respectively. The COD/TN(C/N) ratio was 1.2. The results showed that the four MSL systems could effectively treat the COD, NH4^+-N, and TN, and MSL 4 showed significantly improved NH4^+-N removal efficiency, suggesting the potential of sludge addition to improve the turtle aquaculture effluent treatment. The average COD, TN, and NH4^+-N removal efficiencies of MSL 4 were 70.3%, 66.5%, and 72.7%, respectively. To further interpret the contribution of microorganisms to the removal, the microbial community compositions and diversities of the four MSL systems were measured. Comparisons of the denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis(DGGE) profiles revealed that the amount of nitrifying bacteria and diversity in MSL 4 were higher than those in the other three systems. We concluded that adding 20% of sludge improved the NH4^+-N removal and stability of the system for nitrification, due to the enrichment of the nitrifying bacteria in MSL 4.展开更多
基金supported by the Ministry of Environmental Protection of China(No.2010467014)the Science and Technology Key Plan of Huzhou(No.2011GN19),China
文摘Concentrated turtle aquaculture effluent poses an environmental threat to water bodies, and therefore needs to be treated prior to disposal. This study was conducted to assess the effect of multi-soil-layer(MSL) systems treating turtle aquaculture effluent with adding different amounts of sludge. Four MSL systems were constructed with dry weight ratios of sludge with 0%, 5%, 10%, and 20%(MSL 1, MSL 2, MSL 3, and MSL 4, respectively). The turtle aquaculture effluent had an average chemical oxygen demand(COD), ammonia nitrogen(NH4^+-N) and total nitrogen(TN) concentration of 288.4, 213.4, and 252.0 mg/L, respectively. The COD/TN(C/N) ratio was 1.2. The results showed that the four MSL systems could effectively treat the COD, NH4^+-N, and TN, and MSL 4 showed significantly improved NH4^+-N removal efficiency, suggesting the potential of sludge addition to improve the turtle aquaculture effluent treatment. The average COD, TN, and NH4^+-N removal efficiencies of MSL 4 were 70.3%, 66.5%, and 72.7%, respectively. To further interpret the contribution of microorganisms to the removal, the microbial community compositions and diversities of the four MSL systems were measured. Comparisons of the denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis(DGGE) profiles revealed that the amount of nitrifying bacteria and diversity in MSL 4 were higher than those in the other three systems. We concluded that adding 20% of sludge improved the NH4^+-N removal and stability of the system for nitrification, due to the enrichment of the nitrifying bacteria in MSL 4.