Abstract

Abstract This research describes an innovative two-stage turbidostat culture system that supported sustained exponential growth at different rates and lipid accumulation in the halophilic chlorophyte Dunaliella sp. The first stage was operated as a nitrogen-replete cycloturbidostat, with a 14:10-h light:dark cycle at a growth rate of ∼1.5/day, and its effluent fed an 8-fold larger second-stage culture that then grew at ∼0.2/d. Turbidity-triggered pumps supplied medium consistently throughout the photoperiod only. Cell densities were about double in stage 2 compared to stage 1. They varied minimally throughout the day in stage 2, but in stage 1 they decreased by 50% in the first half of the photoperiod due to cell division beginning mid-photoperiod. Cell sizes increased through the first half of the photoperiod in stage 1, consistent with the phases of cell division, and indicative that the turbidity signal is more strongly influenced by cell size than density. Nitrogen-induced fluorescence transients conf...

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call