Evaluation of microbial inocula for initiation of biological life support systems for wastewater processing on long term and deep space missions
Abstract (Summary)
A fundamental goal of ecological research is to better understand the relationship
between structural diversity, functional diversity and ecosystem stability. Insight into the
mechanisms that regulate microbial ecosystem function should provide important new
information to improve system control for ecological, agricultural and biotechnological
applications that depend on microbial processes. For example, defined microbial
consortia have been employed to improve plant growth through enhanced nutrient uptake,
production of plant growth promoting hormones or control of pathogens. However, a lack
of consistency of results in field application has limited the widespread use of microbial
inoculants. A major goal in rhizosphere studies, therefore, has been to evaluate strategies
to introduce or manipulate rhizosphere flora to improve survival of beneficial organisms
or suppress deleterious ones. This is of direct importance for application to closed
environmental systems employed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA), since microbial inocula will likely be used to initiate any biological waste
processing system used on long-term and deep space missions. To assure safe, effective,
reliable functioning of inoculated systems, it will be important to manage and potentially
manipulate microbial populations within these systems to obviate any negative
interactions and to optimize the positive functions of plant associated communities.
This research focuses on the use of a model plant-based graywater waste
processing system to evaluate the effect of species richness on community phenotype and
community invasibility. The principal hypothesis of this research is that a community of
rhizosphere organisms, constructed using parameters described in this research, will be as
effective as an undefined industrial activated sludge community in terms of its ability to:
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establish in the rhizosphere, persist over time, resist invasion, and degrade organic
compounds. To address this hypothesis, the microbial inocula of different structure were
evaluated based on the ability of the populations to establish and persist in situ, resist
invasion by outside species, and withstand changes in nutritional or environmental
conditions. A combination of PCR-based phylogenetic analysis and quantification,
community level physiological profiling (CLPP) and microarray analysis was employed
to evaluate the effect of microbial community structure on community dynamics,
community stability and ecosystem processes.
Differences in species richness corresponded to differences in phenotypic
potential (surfactant degradation and CLPP) and differences in resistance to invasion. All
of the communities were phenotypically diverse, however, only communities with higher
species richness were able to degrade surfactant and to resist invasion by a competitor.
The constructed community was phenotypically diverse, and even degraded surfactant to
a greater extent than any of other the other treatments. However, this community was
invaded to a greater extent than any of the other communities, the invader persisted in the
population, and one member of the community was completely displaced upon invasion.
These results suggest that species richness improved system performance by increasing
community persistence, resistance to invasion and ability to degrade surfactant.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
School Location:USA - Tennessee
Source Type:Master's Thesis
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