“…As a second option for raw materials that provide a high C/N ratio, one could add the remains of vegetables such as wheat and corn cereal straw, including grass, cut grass, and dry leaves (which, in addition, all have a low lignin content) [105] or sheep, goat, or bovine feces, which have an inoculum rich in methanogenic bacteria that will guarantee the production of biogas [112]. Likewise, according to the theoretical comparison with bovine manure, the mixture of canine waste with vegetable biomass generates levels of biogas similar to that of bovines [113]; researchers have even identified potential vegetables that could be used to produce biodiesel that may enable co-digestion with bovine dung, generating a relevant increase in biogas production, such as Jatropha, a de-oiled cake [114], and others waste products with their oils extracted which can used for biodiesel and for biogas [115]. However, there are combinations that can decrease the anerobic process and generate less biogas, such as the addition of chicken manure, which contains high levels of ammonium, causing an imbalance in the digestion steps and thus leading to the potential accumulation of volatile fatty acids [98].…”