Journal Article10.4014/JMB.1404.04043
Microbial community diversity in anaerobic reactors digesting turkey, chicken, and swine wastes.
Elvira E. Ziganshina,Dmitry E. Belostotskiy,Roman V Shushlyaev,Vasili A. Miluykov,Petr Y. Vankov,Ayrat M. Ziganshin +5 more
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TL;DR: Among methanogenic archaea, Methanosarcina species which have different metabolic capabilities, including aceticlastic and hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis, were mainly involved in anaerobic digestion of turkey wastes.
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Abstract: The microbial community structures of two continuous stirred tank reactors digesting turkey manure with pine wood shavings as well as chicken and swine manure were investigated. The reactor fed with chicken/swine wastes displayed the highest organic acids concentration (up to 15.2 g/l) and ammonia concentration (up to 3.7 g/l ammonium nitrogen) and generated a higher biogas yield (up to 366 ml/g(VS)) compared with the reactor supplied with turkey wastes (1.5- 1.8 g/l of organic acids and 1.6-1.7 g/l of ammonium levels; biogas yield was up to 195 ml/g(VS)). The microbial community diversity was assessed using both sequencing and profiling terminal restriction fragment length polymorphisms of 16S rRNA genes. Additionally, methanogens were analyzed using methyl coenzyme M reductase alpha subunit (mcrA) genes. The bacterial community was dominated by members of unclassified Clostridiales with the prevalence of specific clostridial phylotypes in each reactor, indicating the effect of the substrate type on the community structure. Of the methanogenic archaea, methanogens of the genus Methanosarcina were found in high proportions in both reactors with specific methanosarcinas in each reactor, whereas the strict hydrogenotrophic methanogens of Methanoculleus sp. were found at significant levels only in the reactor fed with chicken/swine manure (based on the analyses of 16S rRNA gene). This suggests that among methanogenic archaea, Methanosarcina species which have different metabolic capabilities, including aceticlastic and hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis, were mainly involved in anaerobic digestion of turkey wastes.
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Citations
Microbial community analysis during continuous fermentation of thermally hydrolysed waste activated sludge
Dores G. Cirne,Dores G. Cirne,Philip L. Bond,Steven Pratt,Paul Lant,Damien J. Batstone +5 more
- 01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: This work emphasizes the diversity of fermentative communities, and indicates that more work is needed to identify and detect the important members of these communities.
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Effect of Increasing Amounts of Ammonium Nitrogen Induced by Consecutive Mixture of Poultry Manure and Cattle Slurry on the Microbial Community during Thermophilic Anaerobic Digestion.
TL;DR: The ability of the acclimated thermophilic microbial community to tolerate a certain amount of nitrogen-rich substrate is demonstrated.
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Performance evaluation of methanogenic digester using kitchen waste for validation of optimized hydrolysis conditions for reduction in ammonia accumulation
Nidhi Sahu,Ganesh Sharma,B. Chandrashekhar,Niti B. Jadeja,Atya Kapley,R.A. Pandey,Abhinav Sharma +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a biphasic system (hydrolysis and methanogenesis) was evaluated for validation of previously optimized hydrolysis conditions [pH 7.2-7.5, Aeration 0.19-0.22 vvm (volume of air per unit volume of media per minute), Temperature 44 - 48°C] for reduction in ammonia accumulation in the methanogenic digester.
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Assessment of Microbial Diversity during Thermophilic Anaerobic Co-Digestion for an Effective Valorization of Food Waste and Wheat Straw
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) analysis at organic loading rates (OLRs) of 3.0 and 7.0 gVS/L/d to assess the predominant bacterial and archaeal populations and their roles during anaerobic mono-digestion of food waste with straw pellets at thermophilic temperature (53 ± 1 °C).
Draft genome sequence of Clostridium jeddahense EE-R19 isolated from an anaerobic digester
TL;DR: The whole genome sequence of Clostridium jeddahense strain EE-R19, which was isolated from a mesophilic anaerobic digester and deposited at DDBJ/ENA/GenBank under the accession number JAAVNF000000000 is reported.
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