manure metagenome Targeted loci environmental

MGnify Record MGYS00005166

Description
Spontaneous foaming in deep-pit swine manure storage accumulates methane and is a threat to the welfare of both human and animal in pork production industry. To understand the microbial drivers behind the foaming manure methane accumulation, we collected pit manure samples from barns across Iowa for 13 months. We integrated swine feed information, manure characteristics, bacterial community (16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing), and methanogen communities (mcrA gene amplicon sequencing to identify the key characteristics and microbial organisms that were unique in foaming and non-foaming pit-manure. By using correlation analysis, we identified the potential microbial organisms that could influence the pit-manure community structures and potentially be used in foaming manure mitigation.


Related Publications

Pubmed Record 34343206

Abstract Text
Foam accumulation in swine manure deep-pits has been linked to explosions and flash fires that pose devastating threats to humans and livestock. It is clear that methane accumulation within these pits is the fuel for the fire; it is not understood what microbial drivers cause the accumulation and stabilization of methane. Here, we conducted a 13-month field study to survey the physical, chemical, and biological changes of pit-manure across 46 farms in Iowa. Our results showed that an increased methane production rate was associated with less digestible feed ingredients, suggesting that diet influences the storage pit's microbiome. Targeted sequencing of the bacterial 16S rRNA and archaeal mcrA genes was used to identify microbial communities' role and influence. We found that microbial communities in foaming and non-foaming manure were significantly different, and that the bacterial communities of foaming manure were more stable than those of non-foaming manure. Foaming manure methanogen communities were enriched with uncharacterized methanogens whose presence strongly correlated with high methane production rates. We also observed strong correlations between feed ration, manure characteristics, and the relative abundance of specific taxa, suggesting that manure foaming is linked to microbial community assemblage driven by efficient free long-chain fatty acid degradation by hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis.