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Metagenomic Analysis during Co-Digestion Buffalo Sludge and Tomato Pomace Post Thermal Stress: A Case Study

Authors :
La Mantia, Maria Chiara
Calì, Massimo
Rossi, Emanuela
Signorini, Antonella
Santangelo, Enrico
Chiariotti, Antonella
La Mantia, Maria Chiara
Calì, Massimo
Rossi, Emanuela
Signorini, Antonella
Santangelo, Enrico
Chiariotti, Antonella
Source :
Journal of Buffalo Science; Vol. 13 (2024); 104-115; 1927-520X; 1927-5196
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The tomato industry and buffalo farming generate waste, including sludge (BS) and tomato pomace (TP), which can significantly impact their economic and environmental sustainability. The case study tracked changes in microflora composition after a thermal shock during anaerobic co-digestion. The inoculum-to-substrate ratio was 0.5 based on volatile solid content under mesophilic conditions. An Automatic Methane Potential Test System was used to monitor the process before and after thermal stress (50°C) occurred for three days. Next-generation sequencing analyzed the bacterial and archaeal communities. The pH decreased, and methane production plateaued due to the high volatile solid content (87 g/L). After thermal stress, the pH returned to neutral, and the batch resumed biogas production. The cumulative CH4 production reached 3,115 Nml. The biogas had a maximum methane peak of 78.5% compared to 58.4% in BS. The taxonomic classification showed that Firmicutes (51.7%) and Bacteroidetes (29.9%) represented 81.6% of the total OTUs among the bacteria. Fonticella, the most abundant Clostridiaceae (average 4.3%), was absent in BS and increased (up to 17.1%) in TP during methane production. Methanocorpusculum was the most abundant in the archaeal community. However, Metanosarcina showed a stronger correlation with methane production. Brief thermal stress significantly altered bacterial and archaeal populations and allowed to resume biogas production.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of Buffalo Science; Vol. 13 (2024); 104-115; 1927-520X; 1927-5196
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1457480708
Document Type :
Electronic Resource