← Projects

Microbial Mitigation of Eutrophication

Year
2016
Field
Environmental engineering
Type
Undergraduate lab project

Overview

Investigated whether naturally sourced microorganisms could mitigate eutrophication and algal blooms driven by nitrogen / phosphorus runoff. Microbes sampled from Maeji Lake were isolated and co-cultured with algae to reduce key water-quality indicators and recover phosphorus.

Key points

  • Isolated 8 microbial colonies on nutrient agar from lake samples; screened against algae and advanced the best strain to a 7-day co-culture (N, P, and combined CNP conditions).
  • Monitored chlorophyll-a, TN, TP, TOC, CFU, pH, and temperature; Chl-a measured by acetone extraction and spectrophotometry.
  • Under eutrophic CNP conditions the strain cut Chl-a 25–30%, TN/TP 50–80%, and TOC up to 85%.
  • Phosphorus showed aerobic uptake then anaerobic release (Poly-P), enabling phosphorus recovery.
  • Proposed an optimized treatment process tied to the national Total Maximum Daily Load policy.

Figures

(a) Magnetic stirrer
(a) Magnetic stirrer
(b) Vibration mixer
(b) Vibration mixer
(c) Reagent preparation
(c) Reagent preparation
(d) Reagent preparation
(d) Reagent preparation
← Back to all projects