Abstract

Exploiting microalgae as feedstock for biofuel production is a growing field of research and application, but there remain challenges related to industrial viability and economic sustainability. A solution to the water requirements of industrial-scale production is the use of wastewater as a growth medium. Considering the variable quality and contaminant loads of wastewater, algal feedstock would need to have broad tolerance and resilience to fluctuating wastewater conditions during growth. As a first step in targeting strains for growth in wastewater, our study isolated microalgae from wastewater habitats, including urban stormwater-ponds and a municipal wastewater-treatment system, to assess growth, fatty acids and metal tolerance under standardized conditions. Stormwater ponds in particular have widely fluctuating conditions and metal loads, so microalgae from this type of environment may have desirable traits for growth in wastewater. Forty-three algal strains were isolated in total, including several strains from natural habitats. All strains, with the exception of one cyanobacterial strain, are members of the Chlorophyta, including several taxa commonly targeted for biofuel production. Isolates were identified using taxonomic and 18S rRNA sequence methods, and the fastest growing strains with ideal fatty acid profiles for biodiesel production included Scenedesmus and Desmodesmus species (Growth rate (d−1) > 1). All isolates in a small, but diverse taxonomic group of test-strains were tolerant of copper at wastewater-relevant concentrations. Overall, more than half of the isolated strains, particularly those from stormwater ponds, show promise as candidates for biofuel feedstock.

Highlights

  • As the earth’s human population increases, world energy demands and reliance upon fossil fuels has continued to rise

  • How to cite this article Massimi and Kirkwood (2016), Screening microalgae isolated from urban storm- and wastewater systems as feedstock for biofuel

  • All eukaryotic isolates are members of the algal division Chlorophyta, which is a diverse group of green microalgae

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Summary

Introduction

As the earth’s human population increases, world energy demands and reliance upon fossil fuels has continued to rise. The need to move to fossil-fuel alternatives is necessary for addressing anthropogenic climate change, and depleting world energy-stores (Hook & Tang, 2013). Algal biofuels in particular have been identified as an exceptional source of carbon neutral, renewable energy (Sharif Hossain et al, 2008; Schenk et al, 2008; Clarens et al, 2010). Their high photosynthetic efficiency, biomass production, and ability to accumulate relatively large. Unlike first and many second-generation biofuel feedstocks, microalgae can be cultivated using saline, brackish or wastewater streams on non-arable land. Tolerance to environmental conditions is an important, but often over looked characteristic when bioprospecting for biofuels, and offers several benefits such as ease of cultivation and resiliency

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