4.7 Article

Inoculating indoleacetic acid bacteria promotes the enrichment of halotolerant bacteria during secondary fermentation of composting

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 322, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116021

Keywords

Aerobic compost; Secondary fermentation; Indoleacetic acid; Indoleacetic acid -producing bacteria; Halotolerant bacteria

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52070176, 21876167, 51678553]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
  3. Research Funds of Renmin University of China [22XNKJ38]
  4. Major Innovation & Planning Interdisciplinary Platform for the Double-First Class Initiative, Renmin University of China
  5. Opening Project of the key Laboratory of Energy Utilization of Agricultural Wastes of the Ministry of Agriculture and Villages [KLERUAR 2020-01]
  6. Science and Technology Planning Project of Fujian Province [2020N0031]
  7. Interdisciplinary platform for ecological civilization

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In this study, the addition of IAA-producing bacteria during the secondary fermentation stage of composting improved the plant-growth promoting potential of composting products. It also accelerated the succession of microbial communities and the transformation of organic substances.
The secondary fermentation stage is critical for stabilizing composting products and producing various secondary metabolites. However, the low metabolic rate of mesophilic bacteria is regarded as the rate-limiting stage in composting process. In present study, two indoleacetic acid (IAA)-producing bacteria (Bacillus safensis 33C and Corynebacterium stationis subsp. safensis 29B) were inoculated to strengthen the secondary fermentation stage to improve the plant-growth promoting potential of composting products. The results showed that the addition of IAA-producing bacteria promoted the assimilation of soluble salt, the condensation and aromatization of humus, and the accumulation of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC). The bio-augmentation strategy also enabled faster microbial community succession during the medium-late phase of secondary fermentation. However, the colonization of Bacillus and Corynebacterium could not explain the disproportionate increase of IAA yield, which reached up to 5.6 times compared to the control group. Deeper analysis combined with physicochemical properties and microbial community structure suggested that IAA -producing bacteria might induce the increase of salinity, which enriched halotolerant bacteria capable of pro-ducing IAA, such as Halomonas, Brachybacterium and Flavobacterium. In addition, the results also proved that it was necessary to shorten secondary fermentation time to avoid IAA degradation without affecting composting maturity. In summary, enhancing secondary fermentation of composting via adding proper IAA-producing bacteria is an efficient strategy for upgrading the quality of organic fertilizer.

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