Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • anaerobiosis (1)
  • bacillus cereus (1)
  • bacteria (1)
  • biofuels (2)
  • biogas (1)
  • hydrolysis (1)
  • isoptera (1)
  • lignin (3)
  • pseudomonas (1)
  • salix (1)
  • shewanella (1)
  • termites (3)
  • willow (7)
  • wood (4)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    This study was designed to develop a cellulase-producing bacterial consortium (CBC) from wood-feeding termites that could effectively degrade willow sawdust (WSD) and consequently enhance methane production. The bacterial strains Shewanella sp. SSA-1557, Bacillus cereus SSA-1558, and Pseudomonas mosselii SSA-1568 exhibited significant cellulolytic activity. Their CBC consortium showed positive effects on cellulose bioconversion, resulting in accelerated WSD degradation. After nine days of pretreatment, the WSD had lost 63%, 50%, and 28% of its cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin, respectively. The hydrolysis rate of treated WSD (352 mg/g) was much higher than that of untreated WSD (15.2 mg/g). The highest biogas production (66.1 NL/kg VS) with 66% methane was observed in the anaerobic digester M-2, which contained a combination of pretreated WSD and cattle dung in a 50/50 ratio. The findings will enrich knowledge for the development of cellulolytic bacterial consortia from termite guts for biological wood pretreatment in lignocellulosic anaerobic digestion biorefineries. Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

    Citation

    Sameh Samir Ali, Haixin Jiao, Shimaa El-Sapagh, Jianzhong Sun. Biodegradation of willow sawdust by novel cellulase-producing bacterial consortium from wood-feeding termites for enhancing methane production. Bioresource technology. 2023 Sep;383:129232

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 37244303

    View Full Text