MALAYSIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY (MJChem)

MJChem is double-blind peer reviewed journal published by the Malaysian Institute of Chemistry (Institut Kimia Malaysia) E-ISSN: 2550-1658

Anammox Microbial Biodiversity in the Karangkates Reservoir Malang and Its Activity as an Ammonia-Rich Waste Degradation

Abdul Khafid Syahroni
Universitas Negeri Malang
Eli Hendrik Sanjaya
Universitas Negeri Malang
Much. Sayfulloh Alwy
Universitas Negeri Malang
Sitoresmi Prabaningtyas
Universitas Negeri Malang
Suharti
Universitas Negeri Malang
Mieke Alvionita
Universitas Negeri Malang
Anugrah Ricky Wijaya
Universitas Negeri Malang
Mohd Fadhil MD Din
University Technology Malaysia
Hong Chen
Changsha University of Science and Technology

DOI: https://doi.org/10.55373/mjchem.v25i5.81

Keywords: Anammox; Candidatus kuenenia stutgartiensis; nitrogen

Abstract

Nitrogen is an important element that plays a role in the cycles in the world. The nitrogen cycle is the most important cycle for living things after the carbon cycle. One of the newest processes in the nitrogen cycle is the anaerobic ammonia oxidation (anammox) process. Anammox is a process when nitrite is used as an electron acceptor in the conversion of ammonium to nitrogen gas with the help of anammox microbes. This study aims to isolate anammox bacteria from sediments from Karangkates reservoir using the Bottle Batch Reactor method, as well as testing the activity of anammox bacteria in reducing excess ammonia in synthetic wastewater containing ammonia using colorimetry method. This study also identifying the biodiversities of anammox microbes in sediment sample using Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) testing. The stages in this research are: (1) Preparation of sediment samples and water samples from Karangkates reservoir, (2) water sample parameters analysis, (3) identification of microbial biodiversity involved in nitrogen cycle using Next Generation Sequencing (NGS), (4) cultivation of samples in Bottle Batch Reactor and (5) analyse the performance microbes in removing ammonia. The NGS analysis obtained Anammox microbes from the Kuenen species, namely Candidatus kuenenia stuttgartiensis with an abundance of 0.07%. Apart from the plantomycetes phylum, it also found several other microbes which usually involved in the nitrogen cycle, such as Proteobacteria 40%, Bacteroidetes 4%, Planctomycetes 6%, Chloroflexi 1%, Nitrosomonas 0.03%, Nitrosospira 0.1%, Nitrospiraceae 0.5% and Pseudomonas 0.2%. The average of ammonia removal in this study was 18 % mL/Day.

PDF

Published 26 December 2023


Issue Vol 25 No 5 (2023): Malaysian Journal of Chemistry

Section