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Ciprofloxacin affects nutrient removal in manganese ore-based constructed wetlands: Adaptive responses of macrophytes and microbes

Journal of Hazardous Materials(2024)

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Abstract
Ciprofloxacin (CIP) has received considerable attention in recent decades due to its high ecological risk. However, little is known about the potential response of macrophytes and microbes to varying levels of CIP exposure in constructed wetlands. Therefore, lab-scale manganese ore-based tidal flow constructed wetlands (MO-TFCWs) were operated to evaluate the responses of macrophytes and microbes to CIP over the long term. The results indicated that total nitrogen removal improved from 79.93% to 87.06% as CIP rose from 0 to 4mgL-1. The chlorophyll content and antioxidant enzyme activities in macrophytes were enhanced under CIP exposure, but plant growth was not inhibited. Importantly, CIP exposure caused a marked evolution of the substrate microbial community, with increased microbial diversity, expanded niche breadth and enhanced cooperation among the top 50 genera, compared to the control (no CIP). Co-occurrence network also indicated that microorganisms may be more inclined to co-operate than compete. The abundance of the keystone bacterium (involved in nitrogen transformation) norank_f__A0839 increased from 0.746% to 3.405%. The null model revealed drift processes (83.33%) dominated the community assembly with no CIP and 4mgL-1 CIP. Functional predictions indicated that microbial carbon metabolism, electron transfer and ATP metabolism activities were enhanced under prolonged CIP exposure, which may contribute to nitrogen removal. This study provides valuable insights that will help achieve stable nitrogen removal from wastewater containing antibiotic in MO-TFCWs. Environmental Implication Ciprofloxacin (CIP) is a broad-spectrum antibiotic that is widely to treat humans and livestock, and which has been reported to have potentially adverse effects on plants and microbes when treating CIP-containing wastewater in constructed wetlands (CWs), thereby posing challenges to treatment performance and stability. This study combined the dynamic response of plants and microbes, and ecological mechanisms to analyze nitrogen removal under different CIP concentration exposures. These results help to assess the effects of long-term exposure to CIP on nitrogen removal in manganese ore-based tidal flow CWs and provide a scientific basis for achieving stable and efficient nitrogen removal.
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Key words
Nutrient removal,Ciprofloxacin,Tidal flow constructed wetlands,Community assembly,Adaptive responses
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