Identification of Nitrifying Bacteria in Untreated Palm Oil Mill Effluent Digestate (POMED®) and Its Nitrification Potential for Agricultural Application

Hanifah, Sabita (2025) Identification of Nitrifying Bacteria in Untreated Palm Oil Mill Effluent Digestate (POMED®) and Its Nitrification Potential for Agricultural Application. S1 thesis, Universitas Andalas.

[img] Text (Cover dan Abstrak)
01. Cover & Abstrak.pdf - Published Version

Download (239kB)
[img] Text (BAB I)
02. BAB I.pdf - Published Version

Download (209kB)
[img] Text (BAB V)
03. BAB V.pdf - Published Version

Download (283kB)
[img] Text (Daftar Pustaka)
04. Daftar Pustaka.pdf - Published Version

Download (254kB)
[img] Text (Skripsi Fulltext)
05. Skripsi Fulltext.pdf - Published Version
Restricted to Repository staff only

Download (4MB) | Request a copy

Abstract

Biological treatment ponds for palm oil mill effluent produce a by-product, Palm Oil Mill Effluent Digestate (POMED®). Mills usually store POMED® in dumping ponds to produce treated POMED®. The rainy season usually causes overflow problems in dumping ponds. This study aims to evaluate the use of untreated POMED® as a bio-organic fertiliser by identifying nitrifying microbes, measuring its nitrification capacity, and assessing its effects on soil chemical properties (pH and C/N Ratio). 16S rRNA gene sequencing profiled the nitrifying microbial community of untreated POMED®. Soil incubation experiments were conducted for 14 days with four treatments: control (T1), half dose of POMED® (T2), normal dose of POMED® (T3), and urea fertiliser (T4). Nitrification potential was measured according to ISO 15685:2012, and changes in inorganic nitrogen (Total Ammonia Nitrogen, NO₂⁻, NO₃⁻), pH, and C/N ratio underwent analysis. The microbial profile showed a diverse community in untreated POMED®, with Nitrosomonas identified as the AOB (0.128% relative abundance) and Nitrospina as NOB (0.020%). In T3, nitrate (NO₃⁻) and TAN concentrations increased by 19.32% and 33.36%, respectively, and ammonia and nitrate oxidation rates were higher than in the control. However, the application of untreated POMED® also caused soil acidification with a decrease in pH from 6.9 to 5.0 due to nitrification and a high C/N ratio (43-77), indicating the potential for microbial nitrogen immobilisation.

Item Type: Thesis (S1)
Supervisors: Dr. Eng. ZULKARNAINI S.Si., M.T ; Prof. Madya Dr. SHAHRUL ISMAIL
Uncontrolled Keywords: Bio-organic fertilizer; nitrifying microorganisms; nitrification; POMED
Subjects: T Technology > TD Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering
Divisions: Fakultas Teknik > S1 Teknik Lingkungan
Depositing User: S1 Teknik Lingkungan
Date Deposited: 28 Jan 2026 07:38
Last Modified: 28 Jan 2026 07:38
URI: http://scholar.unand.ac.id/id/eprint/519150

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item