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Sulfide in oil refinery wastewater was selectively oxidized to sulfur in a biological desulfurization reactor. When sulfide concentration in the influent was 605.3 mg·L-1, 90.7% sulfide removal was achieved and 80.8% of sulfide was converted into sulfur. DNA was extracted from the reactor to construct a 16S rDNA gene library for the analysis of biological communities. Fifty-one clones were randomly selected and their partial 16S rDNA(1 400 bp) was sequenced. Sequencing results were analyzed using the BLAST algorithm at NCBI and a phylogenetic tree was constructed, identifying 10 bacterial groups. The dominant bacterial community in the reactor is γ-Proteobacteria, which account for 76.6% of the sequences. The majority of γ-Proteobacteria belong to desulfurizing bacteria, such as Halothiobacillus sp. (66.7%), Thiovirga sp. (25.6%) and Pseudomonas sp. (7.7%). The phylogenetic analysis demonstrates that the desulfurization system has evolved into a unique microbial community structure consisting mainly of chemoautotrophic desulfurizing bacteria, rather than heterotrophic bacteria. © 2016, Science Press. All right reserved.
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Chinese Journal of Environmental Engineering
ISSN: 1673-9108
Year: 2016
Issue: 7
Volume: 10
Page: 3585-3590
Cited Count:
SCOPUS Cited Count: 1
ESI Highly Cited Papers on the List: 0 Unfold All
WanFang Cited Count:
Chinese Cited Count:
30 Days PV: 6