Abstract

Trace elements (TE) play an essential role in all organisms due to their functions in enzyme complexes. In anaerobic digesters, control, and supplementation of TEs lead to stable and more efficient methane production processes while TE deficits cause process imbalances. However, the underlying metabolic mechanisms and the adaptation of the affected microbial communities to such deficits are not yet fully understood. Here, we investigated the microbial community dynamics and resulting process changes induced by TE deprivation. Two identical lab-scale continuous stirred tank reactors fed with distiller’s grains and supplemented with TEs (cobalt, molybdenum, nickel, tungsten) and a commercial iron additive were operated in parallel. After 72 weeks of identical operation, the feeding regime of one reactor was changed by omitting TE supplements and reducing the amount of iron additive. Both reactors were operated for further 21 weeks. Various process parameters (biogas production and composition, total solids and volatile solids, TE concentration, volatile fatty acids, total ammonium nitrogen, total organic acids/alkalinity ratio, and pH) and the composition and activity of the microbial communities were monitored over the total experimental time. While the methane yield remained stable, the concentrations of hydrogen sulfide, total ammonia nitrogen, and acetate increased in the TE-depleted reactor compared to the well-supplied control reactor. Methanosarcina and Methanoculleus dominated the methanogenic communities in both reactors. However, the activity ratio of these two genera was shown to depend on TE supplementation explainable by different TE requirements of their energy conservation systems. Methanosarcina dominated the well-supplied anaerobic digester, pointing to acetoclastic methanogenesis as the dominant methanogenic pathway. Under TE deprivation, Methanoculleus and thus hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis was favored although Methanosarcina was not overgrown by Methanoculleus. Multivariate statistics revealed that the decline of nickel, cobalt, molybdenum, tungsten, and manganese most strongly influenced the balance of mcrA transcripts from both genera. Hydrogenotrophic methanogens seem to be favored under nickel- and cobalt-deficient conditions as their metabolism requires less nickel-dependent enzymes and corrinoid cofactors than the acetoclastic and methylotrophic pathways. Thus, TE supply is critical to sustain the activity of the versatile high-performance methanogen Methanosarcina.

Highlights

  • Anaerobic digestion (AD) of organic waste and residues is an important component of renewable energy systems, advanced biorefineries, and sustainable waste management strategies

  • Our study has shown that trace elements (TE) deprivation has a remarkable effect on the methanogenic community in anaerobic digesters treating dried distiller’s grains with solubles (DDGS)

  • When we reduced the iron amendment in R2, the iron concentration and that of other TE contained in the iron additive decreased, while simultaneously the free sulfide concentration increased, indicated by a brighter color of the reactor sludge, a strong sulfidic odor and increasing H2S concentrations in the biogas

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Anaerobic digestion (AD) of organic waste and residues is an important component of renewable energy systems, advanced biorefineries, and sustainable waste management strategies. To the macronutrients carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur, trace elements (TE) are crucial for an effective biogas process due to the microbial demand for TE in the anaerobic environment (Demirel and Scherer, 2011). These demands are as diverse as the involved microorganisms and their functions. The authors concluded that cobalt was the most limiting element In another study, both cobalt and nickel limitations caused process instability and decreased biogas production during AD of a model substrate for maize silage (Pobeheim et al, 2011). Stability of AD processes and efficient methane production are impaired by deficiencies of other TE, for example molybdenum, tungsten or selenium (Plugge et al, 2009; Worm et al, 2009; Banks et al, 2012; Munk and Lebuhn, 2014)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call