Literature DB >> 34237529

Compositional and functional succession of bacterial and fungal communities is associated with changes in abiotic properties during pig manure composting.

Xiaofang Wang1, Jinxin Wan1, Gaofei Jiang1, Tianjie Yang1, Samiran Banerjee2, Zhong Wei1, Xinlan Mei1, Ville-Petri Friman3, Yangchun Xu4, Qirong Shen1.   

Abstract

While both bacteria and fungi are important for the degradation and humification of organic matter during composting, it is unclear to what extent their roles are associated with abiotic compost properties. This study evaluated changes in abiotic compost properties and the succession of bacterial and fungal communities during pig manure composting for 90 days. The compost rapidly reached thermophilic phase (>58 ℃), which lasted for 15 days. Both bacterial and fungal community compositions changed drastically during composting and while bacterial diversity increased, the fungal diversity decreased during the thermophilic phase of composting. Two taxa dominated both bacterial (Bacillales and Clostridiales) and fungal (Eurotiales and Glomerellales) communities and these showed alternating abundance fluctuations following different phases of composting. The abundance fluctuations of most dominant bacterial and fungal taxa could be further associated with decreases in the concentrations of fulvic acid, cellulose, hemicellulose and overall biodegradation potential in the compost. Moreover, bacterial predicted metabolic gene abundances dominated the first three phases of composting, while predicted fungal saprotrophic functional genes increased consistently, reaching highest abundances towards the end of composting. Finally, redundancy analysis (RDA) showed that changes in abiotic compost properties correlated with the bacterial community diversity and carbohydrate metabolism and fungal wood saprotrophic function. Together these results suggests that bacterial and fungal community succession was associated with temporal changes in abiotic compost properties, potentially explaining alternating taxa abundance patterns during pig manure composting.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Composting; Metabolic function; Microbial succession; Organic matter degradation; Saprotrophic function

Year:  2021        PMID: 34237529     DOI: 10.1016/j.wasman.2021.06.023

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Waste Manag        ISSN: 0956-053X            Impact factor:   7.145


  2 in total

1.  Full-Scale of a Compost Process Using Swine Manure, Human Feces, and Rice Straw as Feedstock.

Authors:  Yi Gao; Chunxue Zhang; Lu Tan; Xiaocheng Wei; Qian Li; Xiangqun Zheng; Fang Liu; Jiarui Wang; Yan Xu
Journal:  Front Bioeng Biotechnol       Date:  2022-07-01

2.  Core fungal species strengthen microbial cooperation in a food-waste composting process.

Authors:  Yuxiang Zhao; Jingjie Cai; Pan Zhang; Weizhen Qin; Yicheng Lou; Zishu Liu; Baolan Hu
Journal:  Environ Sci Ecotechnol       Date:  2022-05-29
  2 in total

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