Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.105, No.18, 7009-7021, 2021
Development of an aquaponics microbial inoculum for efficient nitrification at acidic pH
Maintaining an optimal pH that simultaneously supports plants, fish, and nitrifying microorganisms is a challenge in recirculating aquaponics systems as nitrification is optimal at a slightly alkaline pH and plant growth is optimal at a slightly acidic pH. Freshwater fish tolerate pH > 5.5. Our aim was to adapt a microbial inoculum for a recirculating aquaponics system from an operational pH of 7.6 to 5.6, compare nitrification activity and production of N2O, and describe changes in the adapted versus unadapted microbial communities. Four adaptation strategies were tested; our results indicated that a gradual reduction from pH 7.6 to 5.6, along with a gradual reduction followed by a gradual return of available ammonium, was the best strategy resulting in retention of 81% nitrification activity at pH 5.6 compared to pH 7.6. 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing and qPCR enumeration of nitrification-related genes showed that the composition of pH 5.6 adapted microbial communities from all four adaptation strategies was similar to one another and distinct from those operating at pH 7.6, with enrichment of comammox clade B bacteria over ammonia-oxidizing bacteria and thaumarchaeota. N2O production of the pH 5.6 adapted microbial communities was below detection in all adaptation experiments, likely due to the increased proportion of comammox bacteria. Aquaponics biofilters enriched with comammox bacteria and adapted to function at pH 5.6 can be a desirable inoculum for freshwater recirculating aquaponics systems to retain nitrification activity and improve crop yields.