[Oral Presentation]Gaseous emissions and control measures during aerobic composting of livestock manure
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[Oral Presentation]Gaseous emissions and control measures during aerobic composting of livestock manure

Gaseous emissions and control measures during aerobic composting of livestock manure
ID:69 Submission ID:158 View Protection:ATTENDEE Updated Time:2024-05-15 17:41:46 Hits:529 Oral Presentation

Start Time:2024-05-31 14:15 (Asia/Shanghai)

Duration:15min

Session:[S6] Clean Processing, Conversion and Utilization of Energy Resources » [S6-2] Afternoon of May 31st

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Abstract
    Composting is employed as an important treatment for livestock manure. Unfortunately, large amounts of nitrogen are lost mainly via NH3 and N2O emissions during composting, causing severe environmental contamination. The application of additives is a highly effective strategy for decreasing their releases during composting. In this study, the effects of adding microbial agents (lignocellulose-degrading microorganisms, LDM) and combined application of phosphogypsum and medical stone (PPM) on NH3 and N2O emissions and their underlying mechanisms during composting were explored. Results showed that LDM and PPM reduced 25.9% and 68.4% of NH3 emissions and 35.0% and 42.9% of N2O emissions, respectively. LDM and PPM had strong correlations with nirS-, nirK-, and nosZ-dominated denitrification processes with low abundance and LDM also reduced the abundance of nitrifying bacteria (amoA), which was significantly positively correlated with N2O emission (P < 0.01). Furthermore, Firmicutes probably contributed to the transformation and release of nitrogen in thermophilic period, whereas Proteobacteria, Chloroflexi, and Bacteroidetes might play important roles in cooling and maturation periods. Structural equation modelling further demonstrated that the reduction in N2O emission under LDM was related to the lower accumulation of NO3--N utilized by denitrifying microorganisms during maturation period. Network and redundancy analysis showed PPM mainly obtained lower NH3 and N2O emissions through the regulation of environmental variables, nitrogen functional genes and bacterial communities. Overall, these results offer insights at a molecular level into the effects of LDM and PPM on NH3 and N2O emissions during composting and provide theoretical and technical support for reducing NH3 and N2O emissions and environmental pollution.
Keywords
Additives; Aerobic composting; Nitrogen loss; Nitrogen functional microorganism; Nitrogen functional genes
Speaker
Lei Liusheng
Nanjing University

Submission Author
Lei Liusheng Nanjing University
Yu Jing Sichuan University
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