Abstract

The substantial release of NH3 during composting leads to nitrogen (N) losses and poses environmental hazards. Additives can mitigate nitrogen loss by adsorbing NH3/NH4, adjusting pH, and enhancing nitrification, thereby improving compost quality. Herein, we assessed the effects of combining bacterial inoculants (BI) (1.5%) with tricalcium phosphate (CA) (2.5%) on N retention, organic N conversion, bacterial biomass, functional genes, network patterns, and enzyme activity during kitchen waste (KW) composting. Results revealed that adding of 1.5%/2.5% (BI + CA) significantly (p < 0.05) improved ecological parameters, including pH (7.82), electrical conductivity (3.49 mS/cm), and N retention during composting. The bacterial network properties of CA (265 node) and BI + CA (341 node) exhibited a substantial niche overlap compared to CK (210 node). Additionally, treatments increased organic N and total N (TN) content while reducing NH4+-N by 65.42% (CA) and 77.56% (BI + CA) compared to the control (33%). The treatments, particularly BI + CA, significantly (p < 0.05) increased amino acid N, hydrolyzable unknown N (HUN), and amide N, while amino sugar N decreased due to bacterial consumption. Network analysis revealed that the combination expanded the core bacterial nodes and edges involved in organic N transformation. Key genes facilitating nitrogen mediation included nitrate reductase (nasC and nirA), nitrogenase (nifK and nifD), and hydroxylamine oxidase (hao). The structural equation model suggested that combined application (CA) and microbial inoculants enhance enzyme activity and bacterial interactions during composting, thereby improving nitrogen conversion and increasing the nutrient content of compost products.

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