Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
683171 | Bioresource Technology | 2009 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Consecutive batch cultures (CBC), involving nine serial transfers at 3, 5 and 7Â d intervals (21, 45 and 63Â d, respectively) were established to enrich for plant fibre degrading co-cultures of anaerobic fungi and methanogens from rumen digesta. Microbial diversity and fermentation end-products were measured at appropriate intervals over each CBC time-course. While methanogenic populations remained diverse, anaerobic fungal diversity was related to transfer interval and appeared to decrease with increasing transfer number. Acetate was the principal aqueous fermentation end-product with minimal quantities of lactate and formate detected. Methane and carbon dioxide were detected in the gaseous head-space of all co-cultures and the total amounts of gas generated per transfer was greater with transfer intervals of 5 and 7Â d compared with a 3Â d interval, although the 3Â d interval tended to be more efficient per unit time. In conclusion, rapidly growing, methane producing co-cultures of anaerobic fungi and methanogens from rumen digesta were easy to establish on lignocellulose (barley straw) and maintain over considerable time periods. These results suggest such co-cultures have potential in industrial scale anaerobic digestion (AD) of highly fibrous substrates, which are resistant to degradation in conventional AD plants.
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Authors
Yan Fen Cheng, Joan E. Edwards, Gordon G. Allison, Wei-Yun Zhu, Michael K. Theodorou,