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Sensor Technology for Water Quality Monitoring - Bioluminescent Microorganisms (Paperback, Illustrated Ed)
Loot Price: R3,218
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Sensor Technology for Water Quality Monitoring - Bioluminescent Microorganisms (Paperback, Illustrated Ed)
Series: WERF Research Report Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Biological wastewater treatment plants can be adversely affected by
influent toxicity. The effects can range from poor clarifier
biomass settling and elevated effluent BOD and ammonia levels to
total plant kills. These problems could be minimized or eliminated
if an effective method existed for continuously monitoring
biological wastewater treatment plant influent for toxicity to the
treatment plant microorganisms. Current influent screening methods
have not been proven to be adequate for adaptation to continuous
screening in the field. The primary reasons include the batch-wise
nature of the assays and an inadequate correlation between the
assays and plant performance. The goal of the research team was to
create new bioluminescent biosensors from different types of
bacteria found in biological wastewater treatment plants for the
development of a multi-channel continuous monitoring system. A
system built from multiple biosensors would make it possible to
differentiate between potential influent toxicity effects to
different classes of bacteria (such as nitrifying and heterotrophic
bacteria). The research team found it unexpectedly challenging to
apply common microbiological transformation methods for laboratory
strains to the wastewater treatment plant strains. The research
team generated six new bioluminescent bioreporters from bacteria
that are typical constituents of activated sludge. Of particular
significance is a bioreporter developed using a Hyphomicrobium sp.,
which is a slow growing bacterium known to be present in
significant numbers in some activated sludge plants. Of the six
generated, initial bioluminescence and toxicity screening indicated
that one strain (a Pseudomonad) was a particularly promising
candidate due to its ease of cultivation and high light production.
Further toxicity testing, however, determined that the response of
the strain to 48 organic compounds and 8 metals commonly found in
wastewater was similar to that of a previously created strain, Shk1
(also a Pseudomonad). Further work is therefore needed in the
generation of appropriate biosensors and test conditions for
populations not represented by the new heterotrophic biosensor.
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