Effects of light and temperature on open cultivation of desert cyanobacterium Microcoleus vaginatus
[Display omitted] •Chlorella sp., Scenedesmus sp. and Navicula sp. were the main contaminating microalgae.•High light intensity was responsible for the green algae contamination.•Low temperature was responsible for the diatom contamination.•High temperature was beneficial to cyanobacterial growth ra...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Bioresource technology 2015-04, Vol.182, p.144-150 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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•Chlorella sp., Scenedesmus sp. and Navicula sp. were the main contaminating microalgae.•High light intensity was responsible for the green algae contamination.•Low temperature was responsible for the diatom contamination.•High temperature was beneficial to cyanobacterial growth rather than green algae.•All microalgal growth was demand for at least average daily light intensity >5μEm−2s−1.
Microalgae cultivation has recently been recognized as an important issue to deal with the increasingly prominent resource and environmental problems. In this study, desert cyanobacterium Microcoleus vaginatus was open cultivated in 4 different cultivation conditions in Qubqi Desert, and it was found Chlorella sp., Scenedesmus sp. and Navicula sp. were the main contaminating microalgal species during the cultivation. High light intensity alone was responsible for the green algae contamination, but the accompanied high temperature was beneficial to cyanobacterial growth, and the maximum biomass productivity acquired was 41.3mgL−1d−1. Low temperature was more suitable for contaminating diatoms’ growth, although all the microalgae (including the target and contaminating) are still demand for a degree of light intensity, at least average daily light intensity >5μEm−2s−1. As a whole, cultivation time, conditions and their interaction had a significant impact on microalgal photosynthetic activity (Fv/Fm), biomass and exopolysaccharides content (P |
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ISSN: | 0960-8524 1873-2976 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.biortech.2015.02.002 |