Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Growth of Wheat Cultivated in Soil Amended with Digestate from Biogas Production

Liliana PAMPILLÓN-GONZÁLEZ, Marco LUNA-GUIDO, Victor Manuel RUÍZ-VALDIVIEZO, Olivia FRANCO-HERNÁNDEZ, Fabián FERNÁNDEZ-LUQUEÑO, Octavio PAREDES-LÓPEZ, Gerardo HERNÁNDEZ, Luc DENDOOVEN

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

Digestate, the product obtained after anaerobic digestion of organic waste for biogas production, is rich in plant nutrients and might be used to fertilize crops. Wheat (Triticum spp. L.) was fertilized with digestate, urea, or left unfertilized and cultivated in the greenhouse for 120 d. Emissions of greenhouse gasses (carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and nitrous oxide (N2O)) were monitored and plant growth characteristics were determined at harvest. The digestate was characterized for heavy metals, pathogens, and C and N mineralization potential in an aerobic incubation experiment. No Salmonella spp., Shigella spp., or viable eggs of helminths were detected in the digested pig slurry, but the number of faecal coliforms was as high as 3.6 × 104 colony-forming units (CFU) g−1 dry digestate. The concentrations of heavy metals did not surpass the upper limits established by US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). After 28 d, 17% of the organic C (436 g kg−1 dry digestate) and 8% of the organic N (6.92 g kg−1 dry digestate) were mineralized. Emissions of CO2 and CH4 were not significantly affected by fertilization in the wheat-cultivated soil, but digestate significantly increased the cumulative N2O emission by 5 times compared to the urea-amended soil and 63 times compared to the uncultivated unfertilized soil. It could be concluded that digestate was nutrient rich and low in heavy metals and pathogens, and did not affect emissions of CH4 and CO2 when applied to a soil cultivated with wheat, but increased emission of N2O.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)318-327
Number of pages10
JournalPedosphere
Volume27
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Apr 2017

Keywords

  • C and N mineralization potential
  • biodigester
  • faecal coliform
  • heavy metal
  • pathogen
  • pig slurry

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