Bacterial Filters Reduce Stink from Big Pig Factories
Concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) on industrial
animal factories can stink up an entire county, due to ammonia, and a
smorgasbord of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Jeppe Lund Nielsen of Aalborg
University, Aalborg, Denmark, et al. report that biofiltration with microbial
filters can remove most of the butyric acid, dimethyl disulfide, and ammonia
from the exhaust air, along with other smelly compounds. The research is
published in the December 2011 issue of the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
The investigators mounted trickle biofilters directly on
livestock facilities. These filters are stuffed with porous corrugated
cellulose pads that serve the bacteria as soil does plants, and irrigated with water
to support the active biofilm and wash away toxic waste.
“We hypothesized that the bacteria in these air filters
would be highly specialized, with individual microbes targeting specific
organic compounds in the smell, which consists of 200-300 compounds in total,”
says Nielsen. The study’s main aim was to identify microorganisms involved in
breaking down butyric acid and dimethyl disulfide, as well as to measure their
performance. The filters removed 99.9 percent, 94 percent, and 90 percent of
the butyric acid, dimethyl disulfide, and ammonia in the exhaust air,
respectively, as well as reducing carboxylic acid concentrations by more than
70 percent, organic sulfur compounds by up to 50 percent, and various aromatic
compounds by anywhere from 48 to 89 percent. The main community members
breaking down dimethyl disulfide were Actinobacteria,
followed by the betaproteobacterial ammonia-oxidizing bacteria, and
bacteroidetes, as well as some fungi.
Nielsen adds that humans can smell some of these compounds
at concentrations of less than a part per billion, and thus, that “only very
specialized microbes [would] thrive at such low concentrations… This aspect of
the filter environment was expected to select for a uniquely tolerant group of
specialized microbes.”
(Anja Kristiansen, Sabine Lindholst, Anders
Feilberg, Per H. Nielsen, Josh D. Neufeld and Jeppe L. Nielsen, 2011. Butyric acid- and dimethyl disulfide-assimilating
microorganisms in a biofilter treating air emissions from a livestock facility.
Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 77:8595-8604.)

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