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Land-based drip-irrigated culture of Ulva compressa: The effect of culture platform design and nutrient concentration on biomass production and protein content

This work developed a laboratory prototype methodology for cost-effective, water-sparing drip-irrigation of seaweeds, as a model for larger-scale, on-land commercial units, which we envision as semi-automated, inexpensive polyethylene sheet-covered bow-framed greenhouses with sloping plastic covered...

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Autores principales: Mendoza, Wilson, Mendola, Dominick, Kim, Jang, Yarish, Charles, Velloze, Alyssa, Mitchell, B. Greg
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6021086/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29949617
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0199287
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author Mendoza, Wilson
Mendola, Dominick
Kim, Jang
Yarish, Charles
Velloze, Alyssa
Mitchell, B. Greg
author_facet Mendoza, Wilson
Mendola, Dominick
Kim, Jang
Yarish, Charles
Velloze, Alyssa
Mitchell, B. Greg
author_sort Mendoza, Wilson
collection PubMed
description This work developed a laboratory prototype methodology for cost-effective, water-sparing drip-irrigation of seaweeds, as a model for larger-scale, on-land commercial units, which we envision as semi-automated, inexpensive polyethylene sheet-covered bow-framed greenhouses with sloping plastic covered floors, water-collecting sumps, and pumped recycling of culture media into overhead low-pressure drip emitters. Water droplets form on the continually wetted interior plastic surfaces of these types of greenhouses scattering incoming solar radiation to illuminate around and within the vertically-stacked culture platforms. Concentrated media formulations applied through foliar application optimize nutrient uptake by the seaweeds to improve growth and protein content of the cultured biomass. An additional attribute is that seaweed growth can be accelerated by addition of anthropogenic CO(2)-containing industrial flue gases piped into the head-space of the greenhouse to reuse and recycle CO(2) into useful algal biomass. This demonstration tested three different drip culture platform designs (horizontal, vertical and slanted) and four increasing fertilizer media concentrations (in seawater) for growth, areal productivity, and thallus protein content of wild-collected Ulva compressa biomass, against fully-submerged controls. Cool White fluorescent lights provided 150–200 μmol photon m(-2) s(-1) illumination on a 12/12 hr day/night cycle. Interactive effects we tested using a four-level single factorial randomized block framework (p<0.05). Growth rates and biomass of the drip irrigation designs were 3–9% day(-1) and 5–18 g m(-2) day(-1) (d.w.) respectively, whereas the fully-submerged control group grew better at 8–11% per day with of 20–30 g m(-2) day(-1), indicating further optimization of the drip irrigation methodology is needed to improve growth and biomass production. Results demonstrated that protein content of Ulva biomass grown using the vertically-oriented drip culture platform and 2x fertilizer concentrations (42:16:36 N:P:K) was 27% d.w., approximating the similarly-fertilized control group. The drip methodology was found to significantly improve gas and nutrient mass transfer through the seaweed thalli, and overall, the labor- and-energy-saving methodology would use a calculated 20% of the seawater required for conventional on-land tank-based tumble culture.
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spelling pubmed-60210862018-07-07 Land-based drip-irrigated culture of Ulva compressa: The effect of culture platform design and nutrient concentration on biomass production and protein content Mendoza, Wilson Mendola, Dominick Kim, Jang Yarish, Charles Velloze, Alyssa Mitchell, B. Greg PLoS One Research Article This work developed a laboratory prototype methodology for cost-effective, water-sparing drip-irrigation of seaweeds, as a model for larger-scale, on-land commercial units, which we envision as semi-automated, inexpensive polyethylene sheet-covered bow-framed greenhouses with sloping plastic covered floors, water-collecting sumps, and pumped recycling of culture media into overhead low-pressure drip emitters. Water droplets form on the continually wetted interior plastic surfaces of these types of greenhouses scattering incoming solar radiation to illuminate around and within the vertically-stacked culture platforms. Concentrated media formulations applied through foliar application optimize nutrient uptake by the seaweeds to improve growth and protein content of the cultured biomass. An additional attribute is that seaweed growth can be accelerated by addition of anthropogenic CO(2)-containing industrial flue gases piped into the head-space of the greenhouse to reuse and recycle CO(2) into useful algal biomass. This demonstration tested three different drip culture platform designs (horizontal, vertical and slanted) and four increasing fertilizer media concentrations (in seawater) for growth, areal productivity, and thallus protein content of wild-collected Ulva compressa biomass, against fully-submerged controls. Cool White fluorescent lights provided 150–200 μmol photon m(-2) s(-1) illumination on a 12/12 hr day/night cycle. Interactive effects we tested using a four-level single factorial randomized block framework (p<0.05). Growth rates and biomass of the drip irrigation designs were 3–9% day(-1) and 5–18 g m(-2) day(-1) (d.w.) respectively, whereas the fully-submerged control group grew better at 8–11% per day with of 20–30 g m(-2) day(-1), indicating further optimization of the drip irrigation methodology is needed to improve growth and biomass production. Results demonstrated that protein content of Ulva biomass grown using the vertically-oriented drip culture platform and 2x fertilizer concentrations (42:16:36 N:P:K) was 27% d.w., approximating the similarly-fertilized control group. The drip methodology was found to significantly improve gas and nutrient mass transfer through the seaweed thalli, and overall, the labor- and-energy-saving methodology would use a calculated 20% of the seawater required for conventional on-land tank-based tumble culture. Public Library of Science 2018-06-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6021086/ /pubmed/29949617 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0199287 Text en © 2018 Mendoza et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mendoza, Wilson
Mendola, Dominick
Kim, Jang
Yarish, Charles
Velloze, Alyssa
Mitchell, B. Greg
Land-based drip-irrigated culture of Ulva compressa: The effect of culture platform design and nutrient concentration on biomass production and protein content
title Land-based drip-irrigated culture of Ulva compressa: The effect of culture platform design and nutrient concentration on biomass production and protein content
title_full Land-based drip-irrigated culture of Ulva compressa: The effect of culture platform design and nutrient concentration on biomass production and protein content
title_fullStr Land-based drip-irrigated culture of Ulva compressa: The effect of culture platform design and nutrient concentration on biomass production and protein content
title_full_unstemmed Land-based drip-irrigated culture of Ulva compressa: The effect of culture platform design and nutrient concentration on biomass production and protein content
title_short Land-based drip-irrigated culture of Ulva compressa: The effect of culture platform design and nutrient concentration on biomass production and protein content
title_sort land-based drip-irrigated culture of ulva compressa: the effect of culture platform design and nutrient concentration on biomass production and protein content
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6021086/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29949617
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0199287
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