Abstract

Feedstock of anaerobic digestion infected with phytopathogens could enhance the risk of spreading those pathogens to uninfested field through digestate. The viability of Fusarium proliferatum, Fusarium verticillioides, Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, and Rhizoctonia solani was investigated in anaerobic digestion experiments using infected plant material of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), sugar beet (Beta vulgaris subsp. vulgaris var. altissima), and potato (Solanum tuberosum L.). Results from lab-scale reactors were confirmed in full-scale biogas plants. Anaerobic digestion under mesophilic conditions (35–42 °C) reduced most of the phytopathogens of feedstocks investigated. Thus, S. sclerotiorum and R. solani lost their viability within 6 h. In the case of sorghum, however, Fusarium spp. infected feedstock required a maximum of 138 h for sanitation. Thus, the risk of spreading plant pathogens with the digestate can only be decreased when the feedstock would undergo an additional treatment before anaerobic digestion or of the resulting digestate.

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