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When waste becomes fertilizer: Can sludge-derived liquids reshape aquatic life in farmlands?

03.17.26 | Maximum Academic Press

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The findings provide critical insights into the environmental trade-offs of recycling sludge-derived liquids in agricultural systems.

Hydrothermal carbonization (HTC) is an emerging technology for converting sewage sludge and other high-moisture organic wastes into reusable products without energy-intensive drying. In addition to producing hydrochar, HTC generates a nutrient-rich liquid byproduct known as HAP, into which a substantial fraction of organic matter, nitrogen, and phosphorus is transferred. Owing to its high nutrient content, HAP has been proposed as a soil amendment to reduce synthetic fertilizer inputs and enhance crop productivity. However, agroecosystems—particularly flooded systems like rice paddies—rely on complex microbial communities at the soil-water interface. How HAP affects periphyton biofilms and their ecological functions remains insufficiently understood.

A study (DOI:10.48130/aee-0025-0012) published in Agricultural Ecology and Environment on 29 December 2025 by Huifang Xie’s team, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, reveals how sludge-derived hydrothermal byproducts reshape microbial networks and ecosystem multifunctionality, providing a mechanistic basis for evaluating the ecological risks of nutrient recycling in agricultural systems.

Using controlled microcosm experiments, researchers exposed periphyton communities to gradient concentrations of sludge-derived HAP and comprehensively assessed water physicochemical properties, microbial diversity and composition (Shannon, Chao1, NMDS), community assembly processes (niche breadth and normalized stochasticity ratio, NST), interdomain bacterial–eukaryotic networks, trophic functional profiles (FUNGuild, FAPROTAX), ecosystem multifunctionality, and predicted metabolic pathways (MetaCyc). HAP rapidly altered water chemistry, initially suppressing dissolved oxygen—especially at high concentrations—while sharply increasing nitrogen loads; however, DO gradually recovered through photosynthesis, and NH 4 + -N, TN, and COD declined over time, with removal rates reaching up to 55% for COD and 35% for ammonium, demonstrating partial purification capacity. Although periphyton biomass decreased with increasing HAP, α-diversity remained stable, whereas β-diversity shifted significantly, with enrichment of Bdellovibrionota and Chlorophyta and declines in Firmicutes and Mucoromycota. Niche breadth narrowed, particularly for eukaryotes, and bacterial assembly became more stochastic under higher HAP stress. Network analyses revealed reduced connectivity, density, and complexity, alongside intensified competition and functional shifts toward chemoheterotrophy and nitrogen fixation. Environmental variables explained over 70% of community variation. Importantly, ecosystem multifunctionality declined significantly with increasing HAP and was strongly associated with community structure, niche breadth, and network complexity rather than species richness. Metabolic predictions further showed suppression of key biosynthetic and nutrient metabolism pathways and enhancement of stress-related pathways, indicating adaptive but insufficient compensation. Overall, the findings demonstrate that HAP reshapes community assembly, trophic interactions, and functional expression in periphyton, with network integrity emerging as the primary driver of ecosystem functioning.

This study underscores the dual nature of sludge-derived HAP as both a nutrient resource and an ecological stressor. While periphyton can partially buffer HAP inputs by maintaining nutrient removal capacity, excessive application disrupts microbial network integrity and reduces ecosystem multifunctionality. These findings highlight the need for ecological risk assessments that move beyond nutrient removal efficiency to include trophic interactions and interdomain network complexity. Careful optimization of HAP dosage and monitoring of microbial indicators will be essential to achieve sustainable nutrient recycling without compromising agroecosystem resilience.

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References

DOI

10.48130/aee-0025-0012

Original Souce URL

https://doi.org/10.48130/aee-0025-0012

Funding information

This work was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (Grant No. 2024YFD1700300), and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos 42107398 and 42277332). Yanfang Feng thanks the support of the '333' High-level Talents Training Project of Jiangsu Province (Grant No. 2022-3-23-083).

About Agricultural Ecology and Environment

Agricultural Ecology and Environment (e-ISSN 3070-0639) is a multidisciplinary platform for communicating advances in fundamental and applied research on the agroecological environment, focusing on the interactions between agroecosystems and the environment. It is dedicated to advancing the understanding of the complex interactions between agricultural practices and ecological systems. The journal aims to provide a comprehensive and cutting-edge forum for researchers, practitioners, policymakers, and stakeholders from diverse fields such as agronomy, ecology, environmental science, soil science, and sustainable development.

Experimental study

Not applicable

Sludge-derived hydrothermal carbonization aqueous phase regulates agro-ecosystem multifunctionality by affecting cross-trophic community in periphyton

29-Dec-2025

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Phoebe Wang
Maximum Academic Press
phoebe.w@maxapress.com

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Maximum Academic Press. (2026, March 17). When waste becomes fertilizer: Can sludge-derived liquids reshape aquatic life in farmlands?. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/80EOPWX8/when-waste-becomes-fertilizer-can-sludge-derived-liquids-reshape-aquatic-life-in-farmlands.html
MLA:
"When waste becomes fertilizer: Can sludge-derived liquids reshape aquatic life in farmlands?." Brightsurf News, Mar. 17 2026, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/80EOPWX8/when-waste-becomes-fertilizer-can-sludge-derived-liquids-reshape-aquatic-life-in-farmlands.html.