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Reduction of Nitrous Oxide Emission from Pig Manure Composting by Addition of Nitrite-Oxidizing Bacteria
96
Citations
15
References
2006
Year
EngineeringNitrous Oxide EmissionNitrite-oxidizing BacteriaBiological Waste TreatmentAnaerobic DigestionManure ManagementMpmc AdditionWastewater TreatmentReactive Nitrogen SpecieBioremediationMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyBiogeochemistryN2o EmissionPig Manure CompostingAmmoniaWaste ManagementNitrous OxideEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental RemediationMicrobiologyMedicineNitrosative StressMicrobiological Degradation
Nitrous oxide (N2O) is emitted from pig manure composting, and the emission correlates with nitrite (NO2-) accumulation in the composting material. In the present study, we added nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB)to inhibit NO2- accumulation and evaluated its effect on N2O emission in a laboratory-scale composting experiment. Mature pig manure compost (MPMC) containing NOB at 10(6) MPN g(-1) WM or cultured MPMC (cul-MPMC) NOB at 10(11) MPN g(-1) WM was added after the thermophilic phase of composting. The addition of these materials prevented NO2- accumulation, promoting oxidation to nitrate (NO3-), whereas the accumulation of NO2- occurred in the material to which NOB was not added as the result of the delayed growth of indigenous NOB compared with that of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB). The pattern of NO2- in the material agreed with that of N2O emission; therefore, N2O emission ceased rapidly when NOB was added. Emission rates of N2O were 88.5 (no addition), 17.5 (MPMC addition), and 20.2 (cul-MPMC addition) g N-N2O kg(-1) TNinitial, respectively. Improving composition of nitrifying communities for complete nitrification promotion would be useful to establish a composting method with low N2O emission.
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