Hi all,
cheers Darrel
This paper has just come my way. It isn't entirely relevant to all of us (but would be to pond keepers). <"Dissolved oxygen concentrations affect the function but not the relative abundance of nitrifying bacterial populations in full-scale municipal wastewater treatment bioreactors during cold weather - PubMed">.I think we both have the same view about what is really important , and that is maintaining a high <"level of dissolved oxygen">.
......... The relative abundance of nitrifying bacteria was determined by sequencing of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA gene fragments. In the three bioreactors with low DO concentrations, effluent ammonia concentrations sharply increased with a decline in temperature below approximately 17 °C, while the bioreactors with high DO concentrations showed stable nitrification regardless of temperature. ...........
I'm going to say that the microbial 16S rRNA assay wouldn't differentiate between nitrifying Bacteria and Archaea because it is a mitochondrial gene <"16S ribosomal RNA - Wikipedia"> and occurs in both domains? Some-one who knows more about microbiology might be able to comment?....... The relative abundance of nitrifying bacteria was determined by sequencing of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA gene fragments.....Even with the decline in nitrification during the winter in the three low DO bioreactors, the relative abundance of ammonia oxidizing bacteria (mostly Nitrosomonas spp.) was curiously maintained. The relative abundance of nitrite oxidizing bacteria was similarly maintained, although there were substantial seasonal fluctuations in the relative abundance values of Nitrospira spp. versus Nitrotoga spp. This research suggests that nitrification activity can be controlled during the winter via DO to produce better effluent quality with high DO concentrations or to reduce aeration costs
cheers Darrel
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