Liquid manure storages are a significant source of methane (CH) emissions. Farmers commonly agitate (stir) liquid manure prior to field application to homogenize nutrients and solids. During agitation, manure undergoes mechanical stress and is exposed to the air, disrupting anaerobic conditions. This on-farm study aimed to better understand the effects of agitation on CH emissions, and explore the potential for intentional agitation (three times) to disrupt the exponential increase of CH emissions in spring and summer. Results showed that agitation substantially increased manure temperature in the study year compared to the previous year, particularly at upper- and mid-depths of the stored manure. The temporal pattern of CH emissions was altered by reduced emissions over the subsequent week, followed by an increase during the second week. Microbial analysis indicated that the activity of archaea and methanogens increased after each agitation event, but there was little change in the populations of methanogens, archaea, and bacteria. Overall, CH emissions were higher than any of the previous three years, likely due to warmer manure temperatures that were higher than the previous years (despite similar air temperatures). Therefore, intermittent manure agitation with the frequency, duration, and intensity used in this study is not recommended as a CH emission mitigation practice. : The potential to mitigate methane emissions from liquid manure storages by strategically timed agitation was evaluated in a detailed farm-scale study. Agitation was conducted with readily-available farm equipment, and targeted at the early summer to disrupt methanogenic communities when CH emissions increase exponentially. Methane emissions were reduced for about one week after agitation. However, agitation led to increased manure temperature, and was associated with increased activity of methanogens. Overall, agitation was associated with similar or higher methane emissions. Therefore, agitation is not recommended as a mitigation strategy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10962247.2019.1629359 | DOI Listing |
Bioprocess Biosyst Eng
December 2024
Civil Engineering, College of Science and Engineering, University of Galway, Galway, Ireland.
Animal manure is considered to have great potential for phosphorus (P) recovery due to its high P content, while P recovery is limited by the transfer of P from the solid phase to the liquid phase. The conventional dissolution process by adding chemical acid reagents is not economically feasible for animal manure. This study used food waste (FW) as a co-substrate for the anaerobic fermentation of pig manure (PM) to achieve the release of P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWaste Manag
December 2024
Bern University of Applied Sciences, School of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences, Länggasse 85 3052, Zollikofen, Switzerland. Electronic address:
Manure is a renewable feedstock, whose theoretical potential for biogas production is scarcely deployed due to modest methane yields that prevent economic feasible operation of anaerobic digestion plants. Steam explosion pretreatment has the potential to improve the digestibility of manure, however it is energy intensive, and the optimal conditions depend on the feedstock. In this work, the solid and the liquid fraction of separated dairy cattle manure were pretreated between 130 and 210 °C for 5 to 40 min by steam explosion to individually determine the optimal conditions for each fraction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioresour Technol
December 2024
Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research (AcSIR), Ghaziabad 201002, India; CSIR- National Environmental Engineering Research Institute, Nehru Marg, Nagpur 440020, India. Electronic address:
Around 4.2 billion people globally depend on on-site sanitation systems, with 43% relying on basic or unsafe facilities with key challenges of containment, emptying, transport, treatment and resource recovery from faecal sludge. This review paper critically examines faecal sludge characteristics and treatment technologies in terms of urine diversion capability, land requirements and capital as well as operational expenditure based on Indian and international practices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
October 2024
Universität Innsbruck, Department of Microbiology, Technikerstrasse 25d, 6020, Innsbruck, Austria.
Cofactor F is an electron carrier playing a crucial role in a variety of microorganisms during redox reactions of the primary and secondary metabolism due to its low redox potential and thus arouses increasing interest. In this study, cofactor F glutamyl tail length spectra in various habitats like manure, compost, soil, and digester sludge samples and their respective microbial communities were investigated using high performance liquid chromatography and an amplicon sequencing approach A previous study was used to identify F producing microorganisms. The highest concentration of cofactor F could be achieved in the horse manure, digester sludge, and mixed manure samples, which was approximately 100-fold higher than in all the other samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Sci (China)
June 2025
Department of Environmental Science, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA. Electronic address:
Manure application as fertilizer can increase environmental exposure risk, as antibiotics, antibiotic resistance bacteria (ARB), and antibiotic resistant genes (ARGs) can be transmitted to agricultural fields, and adjacent natural systems. Understanding how specific antibiotics and ARGs respond within different manure fractions during on-farm management is limited. The study objective was to conduct a mass flow analysis determining the fate of antibiotic resistance factors (antibiotics, ARGs, and ARB) through solid-liquid separation, with the solid fraction continuing through a bedding recovery unit (BRU) via high temperature rotary composting for use of the manure solids as dairy cow bedding.
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