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Freshwater recirculating aquaculture system operations drive biofilter bacterial community shifts around a stable nitrifying consortium of ammonia-oxidizing archaea and comammox Nitrospira

Frontiers in Microbiology, ISSN: 1664-302X, Vol: 8, Issue: JAN, Page: 101
2017
  • 189
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 319
    Captures
  • 2
    Mentions
  • 72
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    189
  • Captures
    319
  • Mentions
    2
    • Blog Mentions
      2
      • 2
  • Social Media
    72
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      72
      • Facebook
        72

Most Recent Blog

Nitrification in Marine Aquaria – Part 1

Nitrification in Marine Aquaria, Part 1, as it first appeared in the September/October 2021 issue of CORAL Magazine. A FRESH LOOK AT THE MICROBES IN HEALTHY REEF SYSTEMS by Timothy A. Hovanec, Ph.D. CORAL Magazine, SOLAR SYMBIONTS, September/October 2021 – Click to subscribe and never miss an issue! An excerpt from the September/October 2021 issue of CORAL Magazine “For every complex problem, ther

Article Description

Recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS) are unique engineered ecosystems that minimize environmental perturbation by reducing nutrient pollution discharge. RAS typically employ a biofilter to control ammonia levels produced as a byproduct of fish protein catabolism. Nitrosomonas (ammonia-oxidizing), Nitrospira, and Nitrobacter (nitrite-oxidizing) species are thought to be the primary nitrifiers present in RAS biofilters. We explored this assertion by characterizing the biofilter bacterial and archaeal community of a commercial scale freshwater RAS that has been in operation for > 15 years. We found the biofilter community harbored a diverse array of bacterial taxa (> 1000 genus-level taxon assignments) dominated by Chitinophagaceae (~12%) and Acidobacteria (~9%). The bacterial community exhibited significant composition shifts with changes in biofilter depth and in conjunction with operational changes across a fish rearing cycle. Archaea also were abundant, and were comprised solely of a low diversity assemblage of Thaumarchaeota (> 95%), thought to be ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) from the presence of AOA ammonia monooxygenase genes. Nitrosomonas were present at all depths and time points. However, their abundance was > 3 orders of magnitude less than AOA and exhibited significant depth-time variability not observed for AOA. Phylogenetic analysis of the nitrite oxidoreductase beta subunit (nxrB) gene indicated two distinct Nitrospira populations were present, while Nitrobacter were not detected. Subsequent identification of Nitrospira ammonia monooxygenase alpha subunit genes in conjunction with the phylogenetic placement and quantification of the nxrB genotypes suggests complete ammonia-oxidizing (comammox) and nitrite-oxidizing Nitrospira populations co-exist with relatively equivalent and stable abundances in this system. It appears RAS biofilters harbor complex microbial communities whose composition can be affected directly by typical system operations while supporting multiple ammonia oxidation lifestyles within the nitrifying consortium.

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