In a groundbreaking study published in the esteemed journal Water & Ecology, researchers led by Yaohui Bai at the Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, have delivered new insight into the intricate ecological consequences of wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) upgrades on river ecosystems. While it is widely acknowledged that WWTP enhancements improve water quality, the ripple effects on aquatic microbial and viral communities have remained largely unexplored—until now.
This comprehensive investigation focused on two rivers in Beijing: the Tonghui River, where the WWTP was upgraded in 2017, and the Qing River, with an earlier upgrade in 2013. The study spanned nearly a decade (2015–2024), providing a rare longitudinal dataset to evaluate microbial and viral community responses to improvements in effluent quality. The contrasting timelines of the WWTP upgrades offered a unique natural experiment to disentangle temporal ecological shifts directly linked to the technological changes in wastewater treatment.
A key finding revolves around nitrogen dynamics—a cornerstone of aquatic ecosystem health. Following the Tonghui River’s WWTP upgrade, total nitrogen (TN) concentrations plummeted from 20–30 mg·L⁻¹ to about 10 mg·L⁻¹. This dramatic reduction was primarily due to the enhanced removal of organic nitrogen compounds, attributable to the installation of advanced treatment processes. Such alteration of the nitrogen load has direct implications for the downstream microbial communities that drive nitrogen cycling, influencing ecosystem functions at a fundamental level.
Delving deeper into the microbial realm, the study revealed that, despite the significant water quality improvements, microbial diversity as measured by the Shannon alpha-diversity index remained relatively stable. This indicates that the richness and evenness of bacterial species did not drastically fluctuate post-upgrade. However, beta-diversity analyses, which capture the variation in community composition between time points and sites, showed substantial shifts in the microbial community structure of the Tonghui River, highlighting nuanced community remodeling rather than wholesale species turnovers.
More specifically, the partitioning of beta-diversity exposed an increasing dominance of species nestedness, which rose from 68% to 86% following the upgrade. This phenomenon suggests that changes in microbial community composition were driven predominantly by the gain or loss of specific taxa while maintaining a core set of bacterial species. In other words, the ecosystem retained a stable microbial backbone while peripheral species adapted or shifted in response to altered environmental conditions.
Functionally, these compositional shifts translated into a notable reorganization of nitrogen transformations. The ratio of nitrifiers—bacteria that oxidize ammonia to nitrate—to denitrifiers—those that reduce nitrate to gaseous nitrogen compounds—dropped by approximately 70% after the treatment upgrade. This indicates a physiological shift favoring denitrification, a process that removes bioavailable nitrogen from aquatic systems via gaseous nitrogen emissions, thereby mitigating eutrophication risks. Genomic analyses of nitrogen cycling genes mirrored this functional transition, revealing an increased abundance of denitrification genes relative to other nitrogen-cycling pathways.
Viral communities in the receiving rivers, while taxonomically stable, exhibited a fascinating biochemical pivot. Contrasting the bacterial community restructuring, viral assemblages displayed minimal temporal shifts in composition, as indicated by the PERMANOVA tests. Beta-diversity analyses revealed that variations between rivers were powered more by species turnover than nestedness, implying a continuous influx of novel viruses likely introduced through WWTP effluent. This dynamic viral replacement maintains diversity but does not induce radical taxonomic upheavals.
Intriguingly, functional gene profiling uncovered a significant shift in viral strategies post-upgrade. The abundance of viral genes associated with replication and structural proteins surged by 15–30%, whereas auxiliary metabolic genes that typically aid host metabolism diminished by approximately 20–40%. This suggests a strategic viral shift towards prioritizing self-replication under improved environmental conditions, likely reflecting reduced host stress and a recalibration of virus-host interactions in a more hospitable aquatic milieu.
Together, these findings illuminate the complexity of ecological feedbacks triggered by WWTP technological improvements. Beyond simple chemical amelioration of water quality, upgrades have cascading impacts on microbial and viral community dynamics and their associated biogeochemical functions. Such biological responses warrant greater integration of microbial ecology into routine water quality monitoring and river management paradigms, as emphasized by Bai’s call to incorporate microbial and viral markers in post-upgrade assessments.
This study stands as one of the few long-term field investigations articulating how engineering interventions intersect with microbial ecology to shape riverine ecosystem processes. It highlights the importance of looking beyond conventional chemical water quality metrics to appreciate the unseen but critical microbial and viral players that regulate nutrient cycling and overall ecosystem resilience.
The research underscores that policy and engineering solutions in urban water management resonate profoundly through aquatic ecosystems, modulating microbiomes in ways that could enhance or undermine ecological integrity. As nitrogen pollution remains a global challenge—fueling harmful algal blooms and dead zones—the ability to engineer microbial communities toward enhanced denitrification through WWTP upgrades may represent a powerful ecological service.
In all, this pioneering work by Bai and colleagues elucidates the nuanced biological ramifications of wastewater treatment innovations, championing a holistic ecological perspective. Their findings compel environmental scientists, engineers, and policy-makers alike to harmonize infrastructure upgrades with ecosystem health metrics rooted in microbial and viral ecology.
Contact: Yaohui Bai, [email protected]
Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100085, China
Subject of Research: Aquatic microbial and viral community response to wastewater treatment plant upgrades
Article Title: Ecological ripple effects of wastewater treatment upgrades on nitrogen-cycling microbes and viruses in urban rivers
Web References: 10.1016/j.wateco.2026.100035
Image Credits: Yaohui Bai, et al
Keywords
Wastewater Treatment, Microbial Ecology, Viral Ecology, Nitrogen Cycling, Denitrification, Aquatic Ecosystems, Water Quality, Environmental Engineering, Microbiome Dynamics, Urban Rivers
Tags: advanced wastewater treatment processesaquatic microbial community changeseffluent quality improvement impactsenvironmental impact of WWTPlong-term ecological monitoringmicrobial response to pollution reductionnitrogen dynamics in aquatic ecosystemsQing River water qualityriver microbiome transformationTonghui River ecological studyviral communities in riverswastewater treatment plant upgrades

