Unmasking photogranulation in decreasing glacial albedo and net autotrophic wastewater treatment.

Environ Microbiol

Department of Earth Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Chiba University, Chiba, 263-8522, Japan.

Published: November 2021

In both natural and built environments, microbes on occasions manifest in spherical aggregates instead of substratum-affixed biofilms. These microbial aggregates are conventionally referred to as granules. Cryoconites are mineral rich granules that appear on glacier surfaces and are linked with expanding surface darkening, thus decreasing albedo, and enhanced melt. The oxygenic photogranules (OPGs) are organic rich granules that grow in wastewater, which enables wastewater treatment with photosynthetically produced oxygen and which presents potential for net autotrophic wastewater treatment in a compact system. Despite obvious differences inherent in the two, cryoconite and OPG pose striking resemblance. In both, the order Oscillatoriales in Cyanobacteria envelope inner materials and develop dense spheroidal aggregates. We explore the mechanism of photogranulation on account of high similarity between cryoconites and OPGs. We contend that there is no universal external cause for photogranulation. However, cryoconites and OPGs, as well as their intravariations, which are all under different stress fields, are the outcome of universal physiological processes of the Oscillatoriales interfacing with goldilocks interactions of stresses. Finding the rules of photogranulation may enhance engineering of glacier and wastewater systems to manipulate their ecosystem impacts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9292683PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.15780DOI Listing

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