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From the vineyard to the bottle, the winemaking process generates a variety of by-products, such as vinasses, spent filter cakes, grape pomace, grape lees, and vine shoots. To avoid damaging the environment and to reduce economic impacts, the by-products and wastes must be handled, disposed of, or recycled properly. This review focuses on an environmentally friendly approach to the management and added value of winemaking by-products, such as grape pomace or grape marc, by using vermicomposting. Vermicompost is a well-known organic fertilizer with potential uses in soil bioremediation and the conservation of soil health. To achieve environmental neutral agriculture practices, vermicomposting is a promising tool for resilient and sustainable viticulture and winemaking. Vermicomposting is a simple, highly beneficial, and waste-free method of converting organic waste into compost with high agronomic value and a sustainable strategy in line with the principles of the circular economy.

期刊论文 2024-09-01 DOI: 10.3390/agriculture14091529

To foster a circular bioeconomy throughout the management of industrial solid wine residues in the wine industry, this work presents the physicochemical and microbiological dynamics of the composting process with white grape pomace, stalks and wastewater treatment plant sludge from the same winery. Three composting windrows of 41 m3 were constructed with 0, 10 and 20% sludge addition. Physicochemical parameters were assessed following the Test Method for the Examination of Composting and Compost (TMECC), and the diversity and dynamics of the bacterial and fungal communities involved in the composting process were assessed via a high-throughput sequencing metabarcoding approach. The addition of sludge increased the moisture content, bulk density, and pH after six months of turned windrow composting. No effect of sludge addition on the macronutrient composition of the compost was observed. The Shannon-Wiener index differed among stages and treatments. Bacterial diversity increased over time, while the fungal community appeared to be highly affected by the thermophilic stage, which led to a reduction in diversity that slightly recovered by the end of the process. Furthermore, the sludge exhibited high bacterial diversity but very low fungal diversity. Consequently, the design of on-site biologically based strategies to better manage wine residues can produce soil amendments, improve fertilization, reclaim damaged soils, and ultimately reduce management costs, making composting an economically attractive and sustainable alternative for waste management in the wine industry. Physicochemical and microbiological studies of sludge and grape pomace in composting are necessary to foster a circular bioeconomy in the wine industry.Sludge addition improved water retention and bulk density, but no effect on macronutrient composition was observed; nonetheless, an increase in beneficial microorganisms was found.Closing the loop in the management of organic residues via composting in the wine industry will improve economic and environmental performance.

期刊论文 2024-06-27 DOI: 10.1007/s42452-024-06047-1
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