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Paper mill sludge harbors microbes that can digest its own waste

Thianheng P, Schroeter KL, Larsbrink J, McKee LS

Soil Health

The landfills absorbing pulp and paper sludge near timber country leach metals and organic compounds into the same watersheds that feed forest soils and the trees gardeners and naturalists depend on.

Pulp and paper mills produce huge amounts of wet, fiber-filled sludge that's nearly impossible to burn or recycle, so most of it ends up in landfills. Scientists discovered that the bacteria and fungi already living inside this sludge can slowly eat the wood-based fibers, shrinking the waste over about 10 weeks. That means the sludge itself could be the source of the biological tools needed to clean it up, cutting landfill use without adding chemicals from outside.

Key Findings

1

Native bacterial and fungal communities in pulp and paper sludge degraded biopolymers over a 10-week incubation, achieving measurable sludge solubilization and volume reduction.

2

A previously validated enzyme cocktail showed no efficacy on the metal-rich sludge, likely due to metal-mediated enzyme inhibition, highlighting the need for native adapted enzymes.

3

Marker gene profiling identified diverse microbial communities that shifted at the genus level over time; the most abundant species were successfully enriched using pulp-derived carbon sources.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Researchers found that the natural microbial communities living inside pulp and paper mill sludge can break down the tough wood-derived fibers and polymers in that waste, reducing its volume over 10 weeks. This opens a path to using sludge's own microbes and enzymes to shrink industrial waste mountains instead of sending them to landfills.

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Abstract Preview

Original paper

Exploring the native pulp and paper sludge microbiome to inspire new biotechnologies for waste minimization.

Thousands of metric tonnes of diverse sludge wastes are generated annually in the pulp and paper industry. Due to a high moisture content and an abundance of inorganic material, many types of sludg...

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