Microalgae-based wastewater treatment could realize simultaneous nutrients recovery and CO2 sequestration. However, impacts of environmental microplastics (MPs) and antibiotic co-exposure on microalgal growth, nutrients removal, intracellular nitric oxide (NO) accumulation and subsequent nitrous oxide (N2O) emission are unclarified, which could greatly offset the CO2 sequestration benefit. To reveal the potential impacts of environmental concentrations of MPs and antibiotic co-exposure on microalgal greenhouse gas mitigation, this study investigated the effects of representative MPs (PE, PVC, PA), antibiotic sulfamethoxazole (SMX), and nitrite (NO2--N) in various combinations on attached Chlorella sorokiniana growth, nutrients removal, anti-oxidative responses, and N2O emission originated from intracellular NO build-up. Microalgal biofilm growth was more inhibited under 10 μg/L MPs than 100 μg/L SMX, and MPs+SMX co-exposure displayed toxicity antagonism while MPs+MPs co-exposure caused toxicity synergism (up to 66 % growth inhibition). Extracellular polysaccharides content correlated well with microalgal biofilm density under various stresses, while SMX involved stresses displayed chlorophyll a content reduction. Microalgal assimilation and MPs adsorption contributed to nutrients removal, and phosphorus removal displayed less variance among different stresses (residual phosphorus <0.5 mg/L) than nitrogen. Intracellular NO conversion to N2O almost doubled during the co-exposure processes, and N2O emission under NO2--N + PE+PVC co-exposure could offset the contribution of microalgal CO2 sequestration by as high as 176.2 %. Results of this study appealed for urgent concern regarding environmental MPs and antibiotic co-exposure on primary producers' growth characteristics and their greenhouse gas mitigation properties.
Keywords: Antibiotic; Intracellular NO conversion; Microalgal biofilm; Microplastic; N(2)O emission.
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