107 research outputs found
Capsular polysaccharides of cultured phototrophic biofilms
Phototrophic biofilm samples from an Italian wastewater treatment plant were studied in microcosm experiments under varying irradiances, temperatures and flow regimes to assess the effects of environmental variables and phototrophic biomass on capsular exopolysaccharides (CPS). The results, obtained from circular dichroism spectroscopy and High Performance Liquid Chromatography, suggest that CPS have a stable spatial conformation and a complex monosaccharide composition. The total amount present was positively correlated with the biomass of cyanobacteria and diatoms, and negatively with the biovolume of green algae. The proportion of uronic acids showed the same correlation with these taxon groups, indicating a potential role of cyanobacteria and diatoms in the removal of residual nutrients and noxious cations in wastewater treatment. While overall biofilm growth was limited by low irradiance, high temperature (30 degrees C) and low flow velocity (25 l h(-1)) yielded the highest phototrophic biomass, the largest amount of CPS produced, and the highest proportion of carboxylic acids present
Diversity and biomass accumulation in cultured phototrophic biofilms
In the present study, biomass development and changes in community composition of phototrophic biofilms grown under different controlled ambient conditions (light, temperature and flow) were examined. Source communities were taken from a wastewater treatment plant and used to inoculate growth surfaces in a semi-continuous-flow microcosm. We recorded biofilm growth curves in cultures over a period of 30 days across 12 experiments. Biovolume of phototrophs and community composition for taxonomic shifts were also obtained using light and electron microscopy. Species richness in the cultured biofilms was greatly reduced with respect to the natural samples, and diversity decreased even further during biofilm development. Diadesmis confervacea, Phormidium spp., Scenedesmus spp. and Synechocystis spp. were identified as key taxa in the microcosm. While a significant positive effect of irradiance on biofilm growth could be identified, impacts of temperature and flow rate on biofilm development and diversity were less evident. We discuss the hypothesis that biofilm development could have been subject to multistability, i.e. the existence of several possible stable biofilm configurations for the same set of environmental parameters; small variations in the species composition might have been sufficient to switch between these different configurations and thus have contributed to overwriting the original effects of temperature and flow velocity
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Measuring the Progress and Success of Regional Health Policies: PRARI Toolkit of Indicators for the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR)
PRARI is a social development research project that looks at world-regional social governance, politics, and policy. PRARI brings together an international team of researchers studying the scope for enhancing the effectiveness of the contributions of Southern regional organisations to poverty reduction. It receives funding from the ESRC
The Open Universe survey of Swift-XRT GRB fields: a complete sample of HBL blazars
We have analysed all the X-ray images centred on Gamma Ray Bursts generated
by Swift over the last 15 years using automatic tools that do not require any
expertise in X-ray astronomy, producing results in excellent agreement with
previous findings. This work, besides presenting the largest medium-deep survey
of the X-ray sky and a complete sample of blazars, wishes to be a step in the
direction of achieving the ultimate goal of the Open Universe Initiative, that
is to enable non expert people to fully benefit of space science data, possibly
extending the potential for scientific discovery, currently confined within a
small number of highly specialised teams, to a much larger population. We have
used the Swift_deepsky Docker container encapsulated pipeline to build the
largest existing flux-limited and unbiased sample of serendipitous X-ray
sources. Swift_deepsky runs on any laptop or desktop computer with a modern
operating system. The tool automatically downloads the data and the calibration
files from the archives, runs the official Swift analysis software and produces
a number of results including images, the list of detected sources, X-ray
fluxes, SED data, and spectral slope estimations. We used our source list to
build the LogN-LogS of extra-galactic sources, which perfectly matches that
estimated by other satellites. Combining our survey with multi-frequency data
we selected a complete radio flux-density limited sample of High Energy Peaked
(HBL) blazars.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 8 pages, 7 figure
Anti‑algal activity of the 12‑5‑12 gemini surfactant results from its impact on the photosynthetic apparatus
A rapid amplification of algal population has a negative impact on the environment and the global economy. Thus, control of algal proliferation is an important issue and effective procedures which reduce algal blooms and control algal fouling are highly desired. Gemini surfactants are considered to have a low environmental impact, therefore they seem to be a promising group of detergents which could reduce algal blooms in water systems. Furthermore, due to their emulsifying properties they could replace algaecides added to antifouling paints and decrease algae adhesion to various surfaces. In this study the toxic effect of the 12-5-12 gemini surfactant was investigated on Chlorella cells and close attention was paid to a potential mechanism of its action. At the high cell density (10.05 × 107 cells/mL) a dose-dependent cell death was found and the IC50 value was reached at the concentration of 19.6 µmol/L after 72-h exposure to the surfactant. The decrease in chlorophyll autofluorescence shows that the photosynthetic apparatus seems to be the target of the tested compound. The presented studies indicate that gemini surfactants could effectively reduce algal blooms in water systems, and if added to paints, they could decrease algal growth on external building walls or other water immersed surfaces
Culturing toxic benthic blooms: the fate of natural biofilms in a microcosm system
A microcosm designed for culturing aquatic phototrophic biofilms on artificial substrata was used to perform experiments with microphytobenthos sampled during summer toxic outbreaks of Ostreopsis cf. ovata along the Middle Tyrrhenian coast. This dynamic approach aimed at exploring the unique and complex nature of O. cf. ovata bloom development in the benthic system. Epibenthic assemblages were used as inocula for co-cultures of bloom organisms on polycarbonate slides at controlled environmental conditions. Biofilm surface adhesion, growth, and spatial structure were evaluated along with shifts in composition and matrix production in a low disturbance regime, simulating source habitat. Initial adhesion and substratum colonisation appeared as stochastic processes, then community structure and physiognomy markedly changed with time. Dominance of filamentous cyanobacteria and diatoms, and dense clusters of Amphidinium cf. carterae at the mature biofilm phases, were recorded by light and confocal microscopy, whilst O. cf. ovata growth was visibly limited in the late culture phases. Life-form strategies, competitiveness for resources, and possibly allelopathic interactions shaped biofilm structure during culture growth. HPLC (High Performance Liquid Chromatography) analysis of exopolysaccharidic matrix revealed variations in sugar total amounts and composition. No toxic compounds were detected in the final communities tested by LC-MS (Liquid Chromatography- Mass Spectrometry) and MALDI-TOF MS (Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization Time OF Flight Mass Spectroscopy) techniques
Seasonal succession of phototrophic biofilms in an Italian wastewater treatment plant: Biovolume, spatial structure and exopolysaccharides
A multiphasic approach was applied to investigate the structural features of phototrophic biofilms that grow in a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) at Fiumicino Airport (Rome, Italy). Seasonal variations in species composition, biomass and exopolysaccharides produced were analyzed by light (LM) and electron microscopy (SEM), high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and circular dichroism (CD). Phototroph contribution to the 3-dimensional structure of the biofilm and its development was assessed by confocal laser scanning microscopy. Analysis of biofilms grown on polypropylene slides showed a stable species composition; seasonal changes in biomass were mostly due to changes of major cyanobacterial and algal taxonomic groups. Extensive growth was evident on the range of artificial substrata that were implanted in the treatment plant. CD spectra and HPLC analyses of 2 operationally defined exopolysaccharide fractions extracted from samples scraped off the tank walls revealed that negatively charged heteropolysaccharides comprised most of the matrix and capsular components of the biofilms. Cytochemical staining distinguished between acidic and sulphated residues in the samples observed by LM. The data provide a new insight into the structural integrity and development of phototrophic biofilms in this hyper-eutrophic environment, indicating a potential use of autochthonous consortia in an environmentally sound tertiary water treatment alternative to conventional chemico-physical technologies
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