Litcius/Paper detail

Fourfold daily growth rate in multicellular marine alga Ulva meridionalis

Masanori Hiraoka, Yutaro Kinoshita, Motoki Higa, Shuntaro Tsubaki, Alvin P. Monotilla, Ayumu Onda, Akinori Dan

2020Scientific Reports44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Microalgae with high growth rates have been considered as promising organisms to replace fossil resources with contemporary primary production as a renewable source. However, their microscopic size makes it hard to be harvested for industrial applications. In this regard, multicellular macroalgae are more suitable for harvesting. Here, we show that Ulva meridionalis has the highest growth rate ever reported for a multicellular autotrophic plant. Contrasted to the known bloom-forming species U. prolifera growing at an approximately two-fold growth rate per day in optimum conditions, U. meridionalis grows at a daily rate of over fourfold. The high growth ability of this multicellular alga would provide the most effective method for CO 2 fixation and biomass production.

Topics & Concepts

Multicellular organismAutotrophAlgaeBiologyBloomBiomass (ecology)PhotosynthesisGrowth rateChlorophytaEcologyBotanyCellMathematicsGeneticsGeometryBacteriaAlgal biology and biofuel productionMarine and coastal plant biologyFood Industry and Aquatic Biology