Microorganisms (Mar 2021)

Exogenous Probiotics Improve Fermentation Quality, Microflora Phenotypes, and Trophic Modes of Fermented Vegetable Waste for Animal Feed

  • Guilin Du,
  • Jiping Shi,
  • Jingxian Zhang,
  • Zhiguo Ma,
  • Xiangcen Liu,
  • Chenyang Yuan,
  • Baoguo Zhang,
  • Zhanying Zhang,
  • Mark D. Harrison

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9030644
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. 644

Abstract

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The fermentation of leaf vegetable waste to produce animal feed reduces the environmental impact of vegetable production and transforms leaf vegetable waste into a commodity. We investigated the effect of exogenous probiotics and lignocellulose enzymes on the quality and microbial community of fermented feed (FF) produced from cabbage waste. The addition of exogenous probiotics resulted in increased crude protein (CP) content (p p p Pediococcus and Saccharomyces were enriched and symbiotic in FF; these were the keystone taxa to reduce the abundance of aerobic, form-biofilms, and pathogenic microorganisms, resulting in an efficient anaerobic fermentation system characterized by facultative anaerobic and Gram-positive bacterial communities, and undefined saprotroph fungal communities. Thus, inoculation of vegetable waste fermentation with exogenous probiotics is a promising strategy to enhance the biotransformation of vegetable waste into animal feed.

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