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Enhanced humification via lignocellulosic pretreatment in remediation of agricultural solid waste.

Authors :
Ma, Jianxun
Ma, Nyuk Ling
Fei, Shuang
Liu, Guoqing
Wang, Yufan
Su, Yuchun
Wang, Xuefeng
Wang, Jihong
Xie, Zhiming
Chen, Guang
Sun, Yang
Sun, Chunyu
Source :
Environmental Pollution; Apr2024, Vol. 346, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Stover and manure are the main solid waste in agricultural industry. The generation of stover and manure could lead to serious environmental pollution if not handled properly. Composting is the potential greener solution to remediate and reduce agricultural solid waste, through which stover and manure could be remediated and converted into organic fertilizer, but the long composting period and low efficiency of humic substance production are the key constraints in such remediation approach. In this study, we explore the effect of lignocellulose selective removal on composting by performing chemical pretreatment on agricultural waste followed by utilization of biochar to assist in the remediation by co-composting treatment and reveal the impacts of different lignocellulose component on organic fertilizer production. Aiming to discover the key factors that influence humification during composting process and improve the composting quality as well as comprehensive utilization of agricultural solid waste. The results demonstrated that the removal of selective lignin or hemicellulose led to the shift of abundances lignocellulose-degrading bacteria, which in turn accelerated the degradation of lignocellulose by almost 51.2%. The process also facilitated the remediation of organic waste via humification and increased the humic acid level and HA/FA ratio in just 22 days. The richness of media relies on their lignocellulose content, which is negatively correlated with total nitrogen content, humic acid (HA) content, germination index (GI), and pH, but positively correlated with fulvic acid (FA) and total organic carbon (TOC). The work provides a potential cost effective and efficient framework for agricultural solid waste remediation and reduction. [Display omitted] • Lignocellulose removal provides humus precursors and speeds up composting. • Removal of lignin increase abundance of the lignocellulose-degrading bacteria. • Removal of hemicellulose enhances the abundance of cellulose-degrading bacteria. • Fulvic acid is the key driven the succession of bacterial community in composting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02697491
Volume :
346
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Environmental Pollution
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176066551
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2024.123646