Piceno Yvette M, Pecora-Black Gabrielle, Kramer Sasha, Roy Monika, Reid Francine C, Dubinsky Eric A, Andersen Gary L
Ecology Department, Earth and Environmental Sciences Area, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, United States of America.
Agricultural & Environmental Chemistry Graduate Group, University of California, Davis, CA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jun 1;12(6):e0177626. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177626. eCollection 2017.
Recycling human waste for beneficial use has been practiced for millennia. Aerobic (thermophilic) composting of sewage sludge has been shown to reduce populations of opportunistically pathogenic bacteria and to inactivate both Ascaris eggs and culturable Escherichia coli in raw waste, but there is still a question about the fate of most fecal bacteria when raw material is composted directly. This study undertook a comprehensive microbial community analysis of composting material at various stages collected over 6 months at two composting facilities in Haiti. The fecal microbiota signal was monitored using a high-density DNA microarray (PhyloChip). Thermophilic composting altered the bacterial community structure of the starting material. Typical fecal bacteria classified in the following groups were present in at least half the starting material samples, yet were reduced below detection in finished compost: Prevotella and Erysipelotrichaceae (100% reduction of initial presence), Ruminococcaceae (98-99%), Lachnospiraceae (83-94%, primarily unclassified taxa remained), Escherichia and Shigella (100%). Opportunistic pathogens were reduced below the level of detection in the final product with the exception of Clostridium tetani, which could have survived in a spore state or been reintroduced late in the outdoor maturation process. Conversely, thermotolerant or thermophilic Actinomycetes and Firmicutes (e.g., Thermobifida, Bacillus, Geobacillus) typically found in compost increased substantially during the thermophilic stage. This community DNA-based assessment of the fate of human fecal microbiota during thermophilic composting will help optimize this process as a sanitation solution in areas where infrastructure and resources are limited.
将人类粪便回收再利用已实践了数千年。污水污泥的好氧(嗜热)堆肥已被证明可减少机会致病菌的数量,并使原生废物中的蛔虫卵和可培养的大肠杆菌失活,但当直接对原材料进行堆肥时,大多数粪便细菌的去向仍存在疑问。本研究对海地两个堆肥设施在6个月内不同阶段收集的堆肥材料进行了全面的微生物群落分析。使用高密度DNA微阵列(系统发育芯片)监测粪便微生物群信号。嗜热堆肥改变了起始材料的细菌群落结构。以下分类的典型粪便细菌在至少一半的起始材料样本中存在,但在成品堆肥中减少到检测不到的水平:普雷沃氏菌属和丹毒丝菌科(初始存在量减少100%)、瘤胃球菌科(98 - 99%)、毛螺菌科(83 - 94%,主要是未分类的分类单元留存)、埃希氏菌属和志贺氏菌属(100%)。除破伤风梭菌外,机会致病菌在最终产品中减少到检测水平以下,破伤风梭菌可能以孢子状态存活或在室外熟化过程后期重新引入。相反,堆肥中通常发现的耐热或嗜热放线菌和厚壁菌门(如嗜热栖热放线菌、芽孢杆菌属、地芽孢杆菌属)在嗜热阶段大幅增加。这种基于群落DNA的嗜热堆肥过程中人类粪便微生物群去向的评估将有助于在基础设施和资源有限的地区优化这一卫生解决方案。