Abstract

AbstractCultivation of microalgae has gained significant interest as an alternative protein source, potentially becoming a target commodity recovered from microalgae-based wastewater treatment. This study examined a semi-continuous cultivation strategy to optimize protein accumulation of the indigenous freshwater chlorophytes, Lobochlamys segnis and Klebsormidium flaccidum, and simultaneously remove nutrients from wastewater efficiently. A strain-specific regime was made based on a fixed biomass concentration at the start of 24-h cultivation cycle, i.e., a constant initial cell density, which regulated harvesting and fresh medium supply volume according to the dilution rate. Six cultivation cycles were conducted in lab-scale 1L reactors with a synthetic municipal wastewater. Lobochlamys segnis and K. flaccidum grew exponentially in all cycles. The biomass productivity was 573 and 580 mg L–1 day–1, in which the total protein consisted of 62 and 45% of dry cell weight (dw), respectively. When a culture medium deficient in nitrogen and phosphorus was used, protein level was significantly reduced. L. segnis consumed all NH4+ and PO43– supplied by the medium replacement, giving the removal rate of 9.2 and 5.2 mg L–1 day–1. Whereas K. flaccidum removed 13.8 mg L–1 day–1 NH4+ without completing PO43– removal. The amino acid profile of both strains was characterized by glutamic acids content (4–5% dw). We concluded that the designed cultivation regime would support a constant biomass production with stable and high protein content, along with an efficient removal of nutrient from the wastewater.

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