Isolation of fungi from dung of wild herbivores for application in bioethanol production
Date
2017Author
Makhuvele, Rhulani
La Grange, Daniël Coenrad
Ncube, Ignatious
Jansen van Rensburg, Elbert Lukas
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Producing biofuels such as ethanol from non-food plant material has the potential to meet
transportation fuel requirements in many African countries without impacting directly on
food security. The current shortcomings in biomass processing are inefficient fermentation
of plant sugars, such as xylose, especially at high temperatures, lack of fermenting microbes
that are able to resist inhibitors associated with pre-treated plant material and lack of effective
lignocellulolytic enzymes for complete hydrolysis of plant polysaccharides. Due to the
presence of residual partially degraded lignocellulose in the gut, the dung of herbivores can
be considered as a natural source of pre-treated lignocellulose. A total of 101 fungi were
isolated (36 yeast and 65 mould isolates). Six yeast isolates produced ethanol during growth
on xylose while three were able to grow at 42 ◦C. This is a desirable growth temperature
as it is closer to that which is used during the cellulose hydrolysis process. From the yeast
isolates, six isolates were able to tolerate 2 g/L acetic acid and one tolerated 2 g/L furfural in
the growth media. These inhibitors are normally generated during the pre-treatment step.
When grown on pre-treated thatch grass, Aspergillus species were dominant in secretion of
endo-glucanase, xylanase and mannanase
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/25763https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bjm.2016.11.013
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S151783821630301X