Abstract
The Seine River is strongly affected by the effluents from the Achères wastewater treatment plant (WWTP)
downstream of the city of Paris. We have shown that the effluents introduce large amounts of ammonia and
inoculate the receiving medium with nitrifying bacteria. The aim of the present study was to investigate the
diversity of
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the ammonia-oxidizing bacterial population by identifying autochthonous bacteria from upstream
and/or allochthonous ammonia-oxidizing bacteria from the WWTP effluents. Measurements of potential
nitrifying activity, competitive PCR, and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of 16S ribosomal
DNA fragments specific to ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) were used to explore the succession and shifts
of the ammonia-oxidizing community in the lower Seine River and to analyze the temporal and spatial
functioning of the system at several different sampling dates. A major revelation was the stability of the
patterns. The CTO primers used in this study (G. A. Kowalchuk, J. R. Stephen, W. D. Boer, J. I. Prosser, T. M.
Embley, and J. W. Woldendorp, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 63:1489–1497, 1997) were shown not to be completely
specific to AOB of the B subclass of Proteobacteria. We further demonstrated that when DGGE patterns are
interpreted, all the different bands must be sequenced, as one major DGGE band proved to be affiliated with
a group of non-AOB in the B subclass of Proteobacteria. The majority of AOB (75 to 90%) present in the lower
Seine river downstream of the effluent output belong to lineage 6a, represented by Nitrosomonas oligotrophaand
Nitrosomonas ureae-like bacteria. This dominant lineage was represented by three bands on the DGGE gel.
The major lineage-6a AOB species, introduced by the WWTP effluents, survived and might have grown in the
receiving medium far downstream, in the estuary; it represented about 40% of the whole AOB population. The
other two species belonging to lineage 6a seem to be autochthonous bacteria. One of them developed a few
kilometers downstream of the WWTP effluent input in an ammonia-enriched environment, and the other
appeared in the freshwater part of the estuary and was apparently more adapted to estuarine conditions, i.e.,
an increase in the amount of suspended matter, a low ammonia concentration, and high turnover of organic
matter. The rest of the AOB population was represented in equal proportions by Nitrosospira- and Nitrosococcus
mobilis-like species.
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