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Effects of different simulated seasonal temperatures on the fermentation characteristics and microbial community diversities of the maize straw and cabbage waste co-ensiling system

[Display omitted] •Co-ensiling was carried out on maize straw and cabbage wastes.•Temperature and ensiling period had significant effects on co-ensiling performance.•Silages were well-preserved for 120 days at −3 and 18 °C, but for 90 days at 34 °C.•Lactobacillus and Leuconostoc were dominated, whic...

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Published in:The Science of the total environment 2020-03, Vol.708, p.135113-135113, Article 135113
Main Authors: Ren, Haiwei, Feng, Yinping, Liu, Tong, Li, Jinping, Wang, Zhiye, Fu, Shanfei, Zheng, Yi, Peng, Zhangpu
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:[Display omitted] •Co-ensiling was carried out on maize straw and cabbage wastes.•Temperature and ensiling period had significant effects on co-ensiling performance.•Silages were well-preserved for 120 days at −3 and 18 °C, but for 90 days at 34 °C.•Lactobacillus and Leuconostoc were dominated, which suppressed undesirable bacteria.•Co-ensiling is an efficient method of crop straw and vegetable waste management. Ensiling is considered as a suitable method to preserve seasonal agricultural residues to enable long-term supply for wastes valorization. In this study, the effects of simulated seasonal temperatures (−3, 18 and 34 °C) on the organic compositions, ensiling fermentation characteristics, and microbial community evolution during 120 days co-ensiling of maize straw and cabbage wastes were investigated. Successful storage performance was obtained at all these three temperatures. Comparatively, silages at 18 and 34 °C showed lower ammonia nitrogen, lower pH and more intensive lactic acid bacteria fermentation than that at −3 °C. Both silages at −3 and18 °C were well-preserved for 120 days with higher biodegradation potential (BDP), accompanied by lower content of acid detergent lignin (ADL). However, the silages at 34 °C could only preserved for 90 days due to low carbohydrate, low BDP and higher ADL content than that at −3 or18 °C. The storage temperature is a critical parameter that significantly affected the silage quality by influencing the microbial community diversity in silages. Proteobacteria and Firmicutes were dominant bacteria at phylum level for all silages while the dominant lactic acid bacteria at genus level were Lactobacillus and Leuconostoc, which restrained the undesirable microbes such as Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas, Flavobacterium, and Pantoea during co-ensiling. Co-ensiling of maize straw with vegetable wastes may provide a promising strategy for long-term preservation of air-dried crop straw while using vegetable wastes as regulatable supplement to achieve silages of desired quality. This study could provide valuable information for conservation and management of agricultural wastes.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.135113