Abstract

Anaerobic co-digestion of protein-rich substrates is a prominent strategy for converting valuable feedstocks into methane, but it releases ammonia, which can inhibit the overall process. This study developed a cutting-edge combined culturomic and metagenomic approach to investigate the microbial composition of an ammonia-tolerant biogas plant. Newly-isolated microorganisms were used for bioaugmentation of stressed batch reactors fed with casein, maize silage and their combination. A co-culture enriched with proteolytic bacteria was isolated, selected and compared with the proteolytic collection strain Pseudomonas lundensis DSM6252. The co-culture and P. lundensis were combined with the ammonia-resistant archaeon Methanoculleus bourgensis MS2 to boost process stability. A microbial population pre-adapted to casein was also tested for evaluating the digestion of protein-rich feedstock. The promising results suggest combining proteolytic bacteria and M. bourgensis could exploit microbial co-cultures to improve anaerobic digestion stability and ensure stable productivity even under the harshest of ammonia conditions.

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