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Impact of sonication at 20 kHz on Microcystis aeruginosa, Anabaena circinalis and Chlorella sp.

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 10:56 authored by Pradeep Rajasekhar, Linhua FanLinhua Fan, Thang Nguyen, Felicity RoddickFelicity Roddick
Blooms of toxic cyanobacteria such as Microcystis aeruginosa periodically occur within wastewater treatment lagoons in the warmer months, and may consequently cause contamination of downstream water and outages of the supply of recycled wastewater. Lab-scale sonication (20 kHz) was conducted on suspensions of M. aeruginosa isolated from a wastewater treatment lagoon, and two other algal strains, Anabaena circinalis and Chlorella sp., to investigate cell reduction, growth inhibition, release of microcystin and sonication efficiency in controlling the growth of the M. aeruginosa. For M. aeruginosa, for all sonication intensities and exposure times trialled, sonication led to an immediate reduction in the population, the highest reduction rate occurring within the initial 5 min. Sonication for 5 min at 0.32 W/mL, or for a longer exposure time (>10 min) at a lower power intensity (0.043 W/mL), led to an immediate increase in microcystin level in the treated suspensions. However, prolonged exposure (>10 min) to sonication at higher power intensities reduced the microcystin concentration significantly. Under the same sonication conditions, the order of decreasing growth inhibition of the three algal species was: A. circinalis > M. aeruginosa > Chlorella sp., demonstrating sonication has the potential to selectively remove/ deactivate harmful cyanobacteria from the algal communities in wastewater treatment lagoons.

History

Journal

Water Research

Volume

46

Issue

5

Start page

1473

End page

1481

Total pages

9

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Oxford, United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006028904

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2011-12-01

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