| Literature DB >> 33264862 |
Yanfu Bai1, Muhammad Khalid Rafiq2, Shanshan Li1, A Allan Degen3, Ondřej Mašek4, Hongwen Sun5, Huawen Han1, Ting Wang1, Stephen Joseph6, Robert Thomas Bachmann7, Rajesh K Sani8, Ruijun Long1, Zhanhuan Shang9.
Abstract
Yak dung is used as fuel in Tibetan homes; however, this use is hazardous to health. An alternative use of the dung that would be profitable and offset the loss as a fuel would be very beneficial. Sweet sorghum silage with yak dung biochar as an additive was compared with a control silage with no additives and three silages with different commercial additives, namely Lactobacillus buchneri, Lactobacillus plantarum and Acremonium cellulase. Biochar-treated silage had a significantly greater concentration of water-soluble carbohydrates than the other silages (76 vs 12.4-45.8 g/kg DM) and a greater crude protein content (75.5 vs 61.4 g/kg DM), lactic acid concentration (40.7 vs 27.7 g/kg DM) and gross energy yield (17.8 vs 17.4 MJ/kg) than the control silage. Biochar-treated and control silages did not differ in in vitro digestibility and in total gas (507 vs 511 L/kg DM) and methane production (57.9 vs 57.1 L/kg DM). Biochar inhibited degradation of protein and water-soluble carbohydrates and enhanced lactic acid production, which improved storability of feed. It was concluded that yak dung biochar is an efficient, cost-effective ensiling additive. The profit could offset the loss of dung as fuel and improve the health of Tibetan people.Entities:
Keywords: In vitro fermentation; Methane emission; Silage agent; Yak dung biochar
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33264862 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.123647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588