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Lagoon Microbiology: Heterotrophs vs. Autotrophs

Patrick Hill

Patrick Hill

Co-Founder | Triplepoint Environmental

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NitrOx Ammonia Removal

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Microbiology Art
Microbiology Art

Lagoon Microbiology: Meet Your Bugs is the first webinar presented by lagoon specialist Julie Hartwig. Julie knows her stuff: She has a BS in Civil Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, a master’s in Environmental Engineering from Penn State, and hands-on experience in wastewater troubleshooting as a rep for a major water technology company.

It’s available on our You Tube Channel (linked below) and through our free online lagoon education site, Lagooniversity. It’s been preapproved for CEU credit in many states. 

Biological treatment is the most efficient way of removing soluble compounds from wastewater. Until recent times, it was functionally the only way. Biological treatment is far more efficient and available than processes like ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis and has been used for centuries. It’s the primary mechanism for lagoon treatment and provides for true removal of BOD without creating sludge. While some will end up in biomass, the majority of carbonaceous BOD is converted to carbon dioxide and off-gases to the atmosphere. There are very few processes that allow removal that simply and efficiently without having to handle waste products.

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The volunteer biological community in the lagoon does the work. Like all life forms, bacteria exist to reproduce, and they need food energy to live and grow. A wastewater lagoon is a buffet for BOD-eating bacteria.

This webinar is a fascinating overview of the lagoon treatment process at the microbiological level and we highly recommend you watch it. Below is a recap of just one small portion of the webinar: heterotrophs vs. autotrophs.

Heterotrophs vs. Autotrophs

Heterotrophs versus autotrophs is a distinction in microbiology between organisms that consume existing food from the environment, which are heterotrophs; and organisms that can make their own food, which are autotrophs. In a lagoon, heterotrophs are far and away the most dominant because wastewater is a food-abundant environment and it’s a lot easier to eat other people’s food than it is to grow your own from scratch. They eat either organic molecules in the waste stream or other organisms, including other bacteria.

Types of Heterotrophic Bacteria

Heterotrophic bacteria in a lagoon commonly come in three different types:

Free floating: These bacterial cells are Lone Rangers: each on its own floating around in the water column. Because they are not likely to settle over time, they can contribute to TSS in the effluent.

Floc Bl

Floc forming: Floc forming bacteria in a lagoon are not as robust as the recycled flocs from an activated sludge operation. In a lagoon, floc-forming bacteria create an extracellular polymer as they reproduce, tying them to other bacteria of the same species so they form this little raft together. Their advantage in a lagoon is that those flocs are large enough to settle out. They eat the BOD and then when they’re done the particle is large enough to sink as sludge and not go out as TSS.

Filamentous: These are bacteria that create long chains of themselves. While they can cause settling problems in clarifiers in activated sludge systems, they’re really very benign in most lagoon systems. They’re also useful as an indicator organism to tell you about the health of your lagoon.

There are many types of BOD-eating heterotrophs, but they’re all robust, hard to kill, and quick to reproduce. They’re also very adaptable to changing conditions. If conditions in the lagoon favor one species of heterotrophic bacteria over another, that species will just reproduce faster to take advantage of those conditions.

Autotrophs

On the opposite side are autotrophs, which are organisms that produce their own food. They still need an energy source, which can be either sunlight through photosynthesis or chemical energy through chemosynthesis. They can’t use carbon from organic molecules, so the chemicals they eat will be inorganic molecules, such as ammonia. Autotrophs require a carbon source from someplace else, separate from their energy source. In a waste stream, particularly for nitrifying (ammonia-eating) bacteria, many use CO2, which dissolved in water becomes alkalinity. Autotrophs take carbon from the water and energy from somewhere else and combine both of those things to build their new cell mass.

Lagoon Ammonia Treatmetn

The autotrophs we discuss most frequently are those that nitrify, or consume ammonia: namely Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter. While there are other species of nitrifying bacteria, these are the two that are most researched and most productive.

Unlike algae, which is an autotroph that uses photosynthesis to make its own food, Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter bacteria use chemical energy from the breakdown of ammonia. Nitrification is a much less energy-yielding process than BOD consumption, so nitrifying bacteria need to eat a lot more than heterotrophic bacteria to get the same baseline energy. Their low energy metabolism makes them much more delicate and demanding of a specific set of conditions:

  • Surface: Nitrifying bacteria are attached-growth organisms that require surfaces to attach to. They will grow on side walls, baffle curtains, aerators, or whatever they can stick to.
  • Low BOD: Autotrophs do not compete well against heterotrophs. For nitrification to occur, BOD levels must be reduced enough to eliminate competition.
  • Warmer temperature: Nitrifying bacteria slow down significantly at temperatures of 50–60° F and functionally stop at temps under 40° F. This can be a huge problem for lagoons in the wintertime.
  • Alkalinity: Autotrophs require a carbon source, which they get from the alkalinity in the water. The guiding ratio is about an 8 to 1 ratio of alkalinity to ammonia, which is typical in municipal lagoons, to nitrify.

Triplepoint’s patented NitrOx® MBBR optimizes conditions for autotrophic nitrifying bacteria to remove ammonia. Download our brochure.

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