MHC’s Centre for Innovation researching how fungi can improve landfill compost for more uses
MEDICINE HAT, AB – Researchers from Medicine Hat College’s Centre for Innovation are attempting to reduce the amount of heavy metal-laden and therefore unusable compost at the city landfill with fungi.
The program is a partnership between the Centre for Innovation and the City of Medicine Hat.
“Compost, made from biosolids of sewage sludge and wood debris, exceeds certain guidelines which limits its use,” explains Allison Campbell, program coordinator and instructor in MHC’s environmental biology and reclamation technology (EBRT) program. “After surveying possible solutions with students from my environmental assessment course, it was shown that biological remediation using plants and soil micro and macro-organisms may be possible.”
Fungal mycelium, or fungal threads which live in places where they can decompose, secrete enzymes which may help to break down any exceedances of heavy metals in the soil. Campbell says this process would improve the compost for a wide variety of uses, including agriculture or oil and gas.