Abstract

Inocula enrichment was performed using an innovative habitat-based selection approach to improve wheat straw (WS) anaerobic digestion (AD) efficiency. The procedure was carried out by sequentially re-inoculating the primary microbial community seven times in subsequent anaerobic reactors containing untreated WS. Re-inocula were performed at different re-inoculum times (24, 48, and 96 h) by moving a porous support mimicking a rumen structure from one batch to the next (S-tests) or re-inoculating only the culture medium (C-tests). Highest H2 production yields were observed after four and five re-inocula (0.08 ± 0.02 NmL h−1 gVS−1 and 0.09 ± 0.02 NmL h−1 gVS−1) for S-24 and S-48, respectively. For S-96, higher CH4 yields were observed after the start-up test and sixth re-inoculum (0.05 ± 0.003 NmL h−1 gVS−1 and 0.04 ± 0.005 NmL h−1 gVS−1, respectively). Accordingly, S-96 showed the highest active Archaea component (7%). C-test microbial communities were dominated by fermenting, hydrogen-producing bacteria and showed lower microbial community diversity than S-tests.

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