Background: Demand-driven biogas production could play an important role for future sustainable energy supply. However, feeding a biogas reactor according to energy demand may lead to organic overloading and, thus, to process failures. To minimize this risk, digesters need to be actively steered towards containing more robust microbial communities. This study focuses on acetogenesis and methanogenesis as crucial process steps for avoiding acidification. We fed lab-scale anaerobic digesters with volatile fatty acids under various feeding regimes and disturbances. The resulting microbial communities were analyzed on DNA and RNA level by terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism of the gene, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, and a [2-C]-acetate assay. A modified Anaerobic Digestion Model 1 (ADM1) that distinguishes between the acetoclastic methanogens and was developed and fitted using experimental abiotic and biotic process parameters.

Results: Discontinuous feeding led to more functional resilience than continuous feeding, without loss in process efficiency. This was attributed to a different microbial community composition. dominated the continuously fed reactors, while its competitor was washed out. With discontinuous feeding, however, the fluctuating acetic acid concentrations provided niches to grow and co-exist for both organisms as shown by transcription analysis of the gene. Our model confirmed the higher functional resilience due to the higher abundance of based on its higher substrate uptake rate and higher resistance to low pH values. Finally, we applied our model to maize silage as a more complex and practically relevant substrate and showed that our model is likely transferable to the complete AD process.

Conclusions: The composition of the microbial community determined the AD functional resilience against organic overloading in our experiments. In particular, communities with higher share of showed higher process stability. The share of these microorganisms can be purposefully increased by discontinuous feeding. A model was developed that enables derivation of the necessary feeding regime for a more robust community with higher share of .

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6173896PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13068-018-1279-5DOI Listing

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