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Identification and quantification of bacteria associated with cultivated Spirulina and impact of physiological factors

Research into the use of 'algal' biomass for human consumption is receiving increased attention due to their favourable nutritional value, photosynthetic efficiency, and lower requirement of land and fresh water as compared to terrestrial crops. The Spirulina species, also known as Arthrospira, is o...

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Main Author: Mogale, Motlalekgomo
Other Authors: Harrison, STL
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Centre for Bioprocess Engineering Research 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mogale, Motlalekgomo
author2 Harrison, STL
author_browse Harrison, STL
Mogale, Motlalekgomo
author_facet Harrison, STL
Mogale, Motlalekgomo
author_sort Mogale, Motlalekgomo
collection Thesis
description Research into the use of 'algal' biomass for human consumption is receiving increased attention due to their favourable nutritional value, photosynthetic efficiency, and lower requirement of land and fresh water as compared to terrestrial crops. The Spirulina species, also known as Arthrospira, is of particular interest due to its high protein content and nutritional value. Open raceway pond systems are popularly used for commercial industrial scale cultivation of microalgae due to their economic feasibility. These open cultivation systems are, however, susceptible to contamination by other microorganisms. This raises concerns relating to suitability for human ingestion and the need to control bacterial growth to prevent contamination by pathogens and to minimise the overall bacterial load. Further, bacterial contamination in processed (harvested and dried) Spirulina biomass has been reported, suggesting that some of these contaminants may end up in the market ready product where appropriate processing approaches are not used. This study sought to identify the microorganisms that typically contaminate Spirulina cultivation ponds, to understand their interaction with Spirulina biomass during cultivation and to evaluate the vulnerabilities of these contaminants, in order to generate strategies for controlling their populations during open pond cultivation. The main objectives of this study were therefore: • To quantify the bacterial load in processed Spirulina powder from a single pilot facility to ascertain the presence of the contaminant in the final product derived from the outdoor pond system used as a case study, and to quantify the bacterial load in the outdoor cultivation cultures. • To identify and characterize the bacteria associated with these Spirulina cultures and processed powder from a pilot operation carried out in Franschhoek, South Africa, with a particular focus on evaluating the likelihood for pathogens. • To establish the dynamics of the relationship between Spirulina and bacterial growth under different environmental conditions including pH, salinity and temperature. • To develop practical methods to control and minimize contamination.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:48.735Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher Centre for Bioprocess Engineering Research
publisherStr Centre for Bioprocess Engineering Research
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/22921 Identification and quantification of bacteria associated with cultivated Spirulina and impact of physiological factors Mogale, Motlalekgomo Harrison, STL Griffiths, Melinda J Smart, Mariette Bioprocess Engineering Research into the use of 'algal' biomass for human consumption is receiving increased attention due to their favourable nutritional value, photosynthetic efficiency, and lower requirement of land and fresh water as compared to terrestrial crops. The Spirulina species, also known as Arthrospira, is of particular interest due to its high protein content and nutritional value. Open raceway pond systems are popularly used for commercial industrial scale cultivation of microalgae due to their economic feasibility. These open cultivation systems are, however, susceptible to contamination by other microorganisms. This raises concerns relating to suitability for human ingestion and the need to control bacterial growth to prevent contamination by pathogens and to minimise the overall bacterial load. Further, bacterial contamination in processed (harvested and dried) Spirulina biomass has been reported, suggesting that some of these contaminants may end up in the market ready product where appropriate processing approaches are not used. This study sought to identify the microorganisms that typically contaminate Spirulina cultivation ponds, to understand their interaction with Spirulina biomass during cultivation and to evaluate the vulnerabilities of these contaminants, in order to generate strategies for controlling their populations during open pond cultivation. The main objectives of this study were therefore: • To quantify the bacterial load in processed Spirulina powder from a single pilot facility to ascertain the presence of the contaminant in the final product derived from the outdoor pond system used as a case study, and to quantify the bacterial load in the outdoor cultivation cultures. • To identify and characterize the bacteria associated with these Spirulina cultures and processed powder from a pilot operation carried out in Franschhoek, South Africa, with a particular focus on evaluating the likelihood for pathogens. • To establish the dynamics of the relationship between Spirulina and bacterial growth under different environmental conditions including pH, salinity and temperature. • To develop practical methods to control and minimize contamination. 2017-01-23T07:59:30Z 2017-01-23T07:59:30Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MSc (Eng) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22921 eng application/pdf Centre for Bioprocess Engineering Research Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Bioprocess Engineering
Mogale, Motlalekgomo
Identification and quantification of bacteria associated with cultivated Spirulina and impact of physiological factors
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Identification and quantification of bacteria associated with cultivated Spirulina and impact of physiological factors
title_full Identification and quantification of bacteria associated with cultivated Spirulina and impact of physiological factors
title_fullStr Identification and quantification of bacteria associated with cultivated Spirulina and impact of physiological factors
title_full_unstemmed Identification and quantification of bacteria associated with cultivated Spirulina and impact of physiological factors
title_short Identification and quantification of bacteria associated with cultivated Spirulina and impact of physiological factors
title_sort identification and quantification of bacteria associated with cultivated spirulina and impact of physiological factors
topic Bioprocess Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22921
work_keys_str_mv AT mogalemotlalekgomo identificationandquantificationofbacteriaassociatedwithcultivatedspirulinaandimpactofphysiologicalfactors