| Literature DB >> 25936555 |
Jorge Medina1, Carlos Monreal2, José Miguel Barea3, César Arriagada4, Fernando Borie1, Pablo Cornejo5.
Abstract
Agricultural activities produce vast amounts of organic residues including straw, unmarketable or culled fruit and vegetables, post-harvest or post-processing wastes, clippings and residuals from forestry or pruning operations, and animal manure. Improper disposal of these materials may produce undesirable environmental (e.g. odors or insect refuges) and health impacts. On the other hand, agricultural residues are of interest to various industries and sectors of the economy due to their energy content (i.e., for combustion), their potential use as feedstock to produce biofuels and/or fine chemicals, or as a soil amendments for polluted or degraded soils when composted. Our objective is review new biotechnologies that could be used to manage these residues for land application and remediation of contaminated and eroded soils. Bibliographic information is complemented through a comprehensive review of the physico-chemical fundamental mechanisms involved in the transformation and stabilization of organic matter by biotic and abiotic soil components.Entities:
Keywords: Agricultural residues; Composting; Organic matter transformations; Organo-mineral complexes
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25936555 DOI: 10.1016/j.wasman.2015.04.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Waste Manag ISSN: 0956-053X Impact factor: 7.145