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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2000, p. 5155-5160, Vol. 66, No. 12
Pulp and Paper Research Institute of Canada
(PAPRICAN), Pointe-Claire, Québec, Canada, H9R
3J9,1 and Department of Natural Resource
Sciences, McGill University, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, Québec,
Canada, H9X 3V92
Received 14 April 2000/Accepted 14 September 2000
The majority of pulp and paper mills now biotreat their combined
effluents using activated sludge. On the assumption that their
wood-based effluents have negligible fixed N, and that activated-sludge microorganisms will not fix significant N, these mills routinely spend
large amounts adding ammonia or urea to their aeration tanks (bioreactors) to permit normal biomass growth. N2 fixation
in seven Eastern Canadian pulp and paper mill effluent treatment systems was analyzed using acetylene reduction assays, quantitative nitrogenase (nifH) gene probing, and bacterial isolations.
In situ N2 fixation was undetectable in all seven
bioreactors but was present in six associated primary clarifiers. One
primary clarifier was studied in greater detail. Approximately 50% of all culturable cells in the clarifier contained nifH, of
which >90% were Klebsiella strains. All primary-clarifier
coliform bacteria growing on MacConkey agar were identified as
klebsiellas, and all those probed contained nifH. In
contrast, analysis of 48 random coliform isolates from other mill water
system locations showed that only 24 (50%) possessed the
nifH gene, and only 13 (27%) showed inducible
N2-fixing activity. Thus, all the pulp and paper mill
primary clarifiers tested appeared to be sites of active N2
fixation (0.87 to 4.90 mg of N liter
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Coliform Bacteria and Nitrogen Fixation in Pulp and
Paper Mill Effluent Treatment Systems
1 day
1)
and a microbial community strongly biased toward this activity. This
may also explain why coliform bacteria, especially klebsiellas, are
indigenous in pulp and paper mill water systems.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: PAPRICAN, 570 St. John's Blvd., Pointe-Claire, Québec, Canada, H9R 3J9. Phone:
(514) 630-4100. Fax: (514) 630-4134. E-mail:
farchibald{at}paprican.ca.
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