Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
679249 | Bioresource Technology | 2016 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
An anaerobic digestion experiment was investigated to evaluate the impact of increasing amounts of ammonium nitrogen due to poultry manure addition on the reactor performance, especially on the microbiome response. The microbial community structure was assessed by using a 16S rRNA gene approach, which was further correlated with the prevalent environmental conditions by using statistical analyses. The addition of 50% poultry manure led to a process disturbance indicated by a high VFA content (almost 10 gHAc-Eq Lâ1) in combination with elevated concentrations of ammonium nitrogen (5.9 g NH4+-N kgFMâ1) and free ammonia (0.5 g NH3 kgFMâ1). Simultaneously the microbiome, changed from a Bacteroidetes-dominated to a Clostridiales-dominated community accompanied by a shift from the acetoclastic to the hydrogenotrophic pathway. The “new” microbial community was functional redundant as the overall process rates were similar to the former one. A further increase of poultry manure resulted in a complete process failure.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Process Chemistry and Technology
Authors
Khulud Alsouleman, Bernd Linke, Johanna Klang, Michael Klocke, Niclas Krakat, Susanne Theuerl,