RESUMO
Anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox), a low-energy-consuming technology, can be used to remove nitrogen from industrial saline wastewater. However, high salinity inhibits anammox microbial activity. This study investigated the effect of salinity on nitrogen removal performance and microbial community structure. The experiment used an up-flow anammox reactor fed with synthetic wastewater with salinity increased from 0.5 to 2.5%. Results indicated that 80% nitrogen removal efficiency can be achieved at 2% salinity with a nitrogen loading rate of 2.0 kg-N/m3/d. Anammox performance significantly deteriorated at 2.5% salinity. High-throughput sequencing revealed that Planctomycetes (representative anammox bacteria) increased with salinity, replacing Proteobacteria (representative heterotrophic denitrifying bacteria) in the microbial community. qPCR analysis indicated that relative abundance of "Candidatus Kuenenia" within anammox bacteria increased from 3.96 to 83.41%, corresponding to salinity of 0.5-2.0%, and subsequently decreased to 63.27% at 2.5% salinity, correlating with nitrogen-removal performance. Thus, anammox has potential in nitrogen removal from wastewater with salinity up to 2%.