The removal of antibiotic resistance genes by different biological treatment processes of four wastewater treatment plants in various seasons

VIEWS - 316 (Abstract) 63 (PDF)
Zimu Wang, Guolan Wang, Jieting Qu, Wen Hong, Ling Luo

Abstract


The widespread antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) severely jeopardizing human health have been widely concerned. Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are commonly considered the important sources and sinks of ARGs due to their roles in depositing ARGs and provoking ARGs' proliferation. Current WWTPs often use biological treatment to remove pollutants, whereas the purification efficacy of ARGs is unclear. Thus, this study investigated the seasonal changes of ARGs (tetA, tetC, tetM, tetO, tetQ, tetW, and tetX, as representative) and a class of integron (intI1) in the sludge of different treatment units of four WWTPs to understand the role of WWPTs in ARGs spread. It is found that ARGs abundance varied between summer and winter depending on the types of ARGs and treatment units. The cumulative abundance of ARGs in the same treatment unit showed no obvious difference between seasons. By comparison, ARGs abundance was generally lower in the anoxic unit than in the oxic unit. Moreover, the WWTPs with Cyclic Activated Sludge System (CASS) process reduced the amount of ARGs in sludge, while the WWTPs with Anaerobic-Anoxic-Oxic (A2O) increased ARGs abundance. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that the excess sludge still posed a risk for ARG spread after biological treatment.

Keywords


Antibiotic resistant genes; Wastewater treatment plants; CASS; A2O; Sludge

Full Text:

References

View



DOI: https://doi.org/10.26789/AEB.2022.01.005
Crossmark

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2022 Zimu Wang, Guolan Wang, Jieting Qu, Wen Hong, Ling Luo

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.



Cookies Notification