Effects of Effective Microorganism (EM) Inoculation on Co-Composting of Auricularia heimuer Residue with Chicken Manure and Subsequent Maize Growth
Yuting Feng, Yinzhen Zhai, Jiangyan Ao, Keqing Qian, Ying Wang, Miaomiao Ma, Peinan Sun, Yu Li, Bo Zhang, Xiao Li, Han Yu

TL;DR
This study shows that adding Effective Microorganisms to compost improves the composting process and boosts maize growth and yield.
Contribution
The study identifies optimal EM concentrations for enhancing composting and maize productivity using Auricularia heimuer residue and chicken manure.
Findings
EM at 5–10% accelerated composting by shortening the heating phase and increasing thermophilic duration.
The 5% EM treatment improved soil nutrients and boosted maize yield parameters like grain weight and root activity.
Root activity, soil nitrogen, and enzyme activity were strongly correlated with higher maize yields.
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of different Effective Microorganism (EM) inoculation concentrations (0%, 0.5%, 2%, 5%, 10%, 15%) on the co-composting of Auricularia heimuer residue with chicken manure and the subsequent growth of maize. The aim was to enhance composting efficiency and promote maize productivity. Results showed that EM addition, particularly at medium concentrations, significantly accelerated the composting process by shortening the heating phase and prolonging the thermophilic period, with the 10% treatment reaching >50 °C by day 2. The 5–10% EM treatments markedly promoted the degradation of cellulose and hemicellulose, and enhanced key enzyme activities (e.g., cellulase and hemicellulase) during composting and maize growth stages. Regarding soil nutrients, the 5% EM treatment led to the most balanced increases in total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAgriculture, Plant Science, Crop Management · Composting and Vermicomposting Techniques · Plant Growth Enhancement Techniques
