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Effects of thermophilic bacteria inoculation on maturity, gaseous emission and bacterial community succession in hyperthermophilic composting.

Hyperthermophilic composting, characterized by temperatures equal to or exceeding 75 °C, offers superior compost maturity and performance. Inoculation with thermophilic bacteria presents a viable approach to achieving hyperthermophilic composting. This study investigates the effects of inoculating thermophilic bacteria, isolated at different temperatures (50 °C, 60 °C, and 70 °C) into compost on maturity, gaseous emissions, and microbial community dynamics during co-composting. Results indicate that the thermophilic bacteria inoculation treatments exhibited peak temperature on Day 3, with the maximum temperature of 75 °C reached two days earlier than the control treatment. Furthermore, these treatments demonstrated increased bacterial richness and diversity, along with elevated relative abundances of Firmicutes and Proteobacteria. They also fostered mutualistic correlations among microbial species, enhancing network connectivity and complexity, thereby facilitating lignocellulose degradation. Specifically, inoculation with thermophilic bacteria at 60 °C increased the relative abundance of Thermobifida and unclassified-f-Thermomonosporaceae (Actinobacteriota), whereas Bacillus, a thermophilic bacterium, was enriched in the 70 °C inoculation treatment. Consequently, the thermophilic bacteria at 60 °C and 70 °C enhanced maturity by 36 %-50 % and reduced NH3 emissions by 1.08 %-27.50 % through the proliferation of thermophilic heterotrophic ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (Corynebacterium). Moreover, all inoculation treatments decreased CH4 emissions by 6 %-27 % through the enrichment of methanotrophic bacteria (Methylococcaceae) and reduced H2 S, Me2 S, and Me2 SS emissions by 1 %-25 %, 47 %-63 %, and 15 %-53 %, respectively. However, the inoculation treatments led to increased N2 O emissions through enhanced denitrification, as evidenced by the enrichment of Truepera and Pusillimonas. Overall, thermophilic bacteria inoculation promoted bacteria associated with compost maturity while attenuating the relationship between core bacteria and gaseous emissions during composting.

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