home > bioproject > PRJEB4349
identifier PRJEB4349
type bioproject
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organism
title Changes in bacterial and fungal communities across compost recipes, preparation methods, and composting times
description Compost production is a critical component of organic waste handling, and compost applications to soil are increasingly important to crop production. However, we know surprisingly little about the microbial communities involved in the composting process and the factors shaping compost microbial dynamics. Here, we used high-throughput sequencing approaches to assess the diversity and composition of both bacterial and fungal communities in compost produced at a commercial-scale. Bacterial and fungal communities responded to both compost recipe and composting method. Specifically, bacterial communities in manure and hay recipes contained greater relative abundances of Firmicutes than hardwood recipes with hay recipes containing relatively more Actinobacteria and Gemmatimonadetes. In contrast, hardwood recipes contained a large relative abundance of Acidobacteria and Chloroflexi. Fungal communities of manure-silage samples were distinguished by a greater relative abundance of Pezizomycetes and Microascales. Hay recipes uniquely contained abundant Epicoccum, Thermomyces, Eurotium, Arthrobotrys, and Myriococcum. Hardwood recipes contained relatively abundant Sordariomycetes. Holding recipe constant, there were significantly different bacterial and fungal communities when the composting process was managed by windrow, aerated static pile, or vermicompost. Temporal dynamics of the composting process followed known patterns of degradative succession in herbivore manure. The initial community was dominated by Phycomycetes, followed by ascomycetes and finally basidiomycetes. Zygomycota were associated more with manure-silage and hay than hardwood composts. Most commercial composters focus on the thermophilic phase as an economic means to insure sanitation of compost from pathogens. However, the community succeeding the thermophilic phase begs further investigation to determine how the microbial dynamics observed here can be best managed to generate compost with the desired properties.
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dbXrefs
sra-run  ERR315519ERR315520ERR315521ERR315522ERR315523ERR315524ERR315525ERR315526ERR315527ERR315528 More
sra-submission  ERA240757
biosample  SAMEA2143043SAMEA2145136SAMEA2149936SAMEA2149000SAMEA2156169SAMEA2144828SAMEA2143354SAMEA1965048SAMEA2157701SAMEA2161440 More
sra-study  ERP003625
sra-sample  ERS327204ERS327205ERS327206ERS327207ERS327208ERS327209ERS327210ERS327211ERS327212ERS327213 More
sra-experiment  ERX288667ERX288668ERX288669ERX288670ERX288671ERX288672ERX288673ERX288674ERX288675ERX288676 More
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status public
visibility unrestricted-access
dateCreated 2013-07-18T00:00:00Z
dateModified 2013-07-18T00:00:00Z
datePublished 2013-07-17T01:00:00Z