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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2001, p. 4286-4292, Vol. 67, No. 9
Flow Cytometry Group1
and Institute of Pathology,2 National
Research Center for Environment and Health, D-85764
Neuherberg/Munich, and Institute of Water Quality and Waste
Management, Technical University of Munich, D-85784
Garching,3 Germany
Received 23 January 2001/Accepted 12 June 2001
We investigated attachment processes of hydrophobic and
hydrophilic particles (diameter = 1 µm) to mature biofilms
grown on clay marbles in a sequencing batch biofilm reactor. During a
treatment cycle with filtered wastewater containing different
fluorescent beads, the progression of particle density in various
biofilm compartments (carrier biofilm, basic biofilm layer, biofilm
flocs, and sessile ciliates) was determined by flow cytometry, confocal laser scanning microscopy and automated image analysis. Particles were
almost completely removed from wastewater by typical processes of
particle retention: up to 58% of particles attached to clay marbles, up to 15% were associated with suspended flocs, and up to
10% were ingested by sessile ciliates. Ingestion of particles by
ciliates was exceptionally high immediately after wastewater addition
(1,200 particles grazer
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.9.4286-4292.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Interception of Small Particles by Flocculent
Structures, Sessile Ciliates, and the Basic Layer of a Wastewater
Biofilm
1 h
1) and continued
until approximately 14% of the water had been cleared by ciliate
filter feeding. Most probably, ciliate bioturbation increases particle sorption to the basic biofilm. Backwashing of the
reactor detached pieces of biofilm and thus released approximately 50%
of the particles into rinsing water. Clay marbles in the upper part of
the reactor were more efficiently abraded than in the lower part. No
indications for selective attachment of the applied hydrophobic and
hydrophilic beads were found. As a consequence of interception
patterns, organisms at elevated biofilm structures are probably major
profiteers of wastewater particles; among them, ciliates may be of
major importance because of their highly active digestive food vacuoles.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Flow Cytometry
Group, National Research Center for Environment and Health,
Ingolstädter Landstr. 1, D-85764 Neuherberg, Germany. Phone:
49-89-3187-3426. Fax: 49-89-3187-3349. E-mail:
eisenmann{at}gsf.de.
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