Litcius/Paper detail

Effect of seawater on the biomass composition of Spirulina produced at a pilot-scale

Silvia Villaró, Marco García‐Vaquero, Lara Morán, Carlos Álvarez, Eduarda M. Cabral, Tomás Lafarga

2023New Biotechnology19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The microalga Arthrospira platensis BEA 005B was produced in 11.4 m3 raceway photobioreactors and a culture medium based on commercial fertilisers and either freshwater or seawater. The biomass productivity of the reactors operated at a fixed dilution rate of 0.3 day-1 decreased from 22.9 g·m-2·day-1 when operated using freshwater to 16.3 g·m-2·day-1 when the biomass was produced using seawater. The protein content of the biomass produced in seawater was lower; however, the content of essential amino acids including valine, leucine and isoleucine was higher. Seawater also triggered the production of carotenoids and altered the synthesis and accumulation of fatty acids. For example, the biomass produced using seawater showed a 319% and 210% higher content of oleic and eicosenoic acid, respectively. The results demonstrate that it is possible to produce the selected microalga using seawater after an adaptation period and that the composition of the produced biomass is suitable for food applications.

Topics & Concepts

SeawaterBiomass (ecology)PhotobioreactorFood scienceChemistryComposition (language)Isochrysis galbanaDilutionSpirulina (dietary supplement)ValineBotanyAlgaeEnvironmental chemistryBiologyRaw materialAmino acidAgronomyEcologyBiochemistryThermodynamicsOrganic chemistryPhilosophyLinguisticsPhysicsAlgal biology and biofuel productionBiodiesel Production and ApplicationsAquaculture Nutrition and Growth