Formulation of an Alternative Culture Medium for Arthrospira maxima (Spirulina) Based on “Tequesquite,” a Traditional Mineral Resource |
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Authors: | Fernando Martínez‐Jerónimo Dante Ivo Flores‐Hernández Juvencio Galindez‐Mayer |
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Affiliation: | Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, Laboratorio de Hidrobiología Experimental y Laboratorio de Bioingeniería, Ciudad de México, Del. Miguel Hidalgo, Mexico |
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Abstract: | Culture media formulation for Arthrospira maxima (formerly designated as Spirulina maxima) production is a constraining factor. Use of synthetic media could be expensive because most of the commercial strains require salinity conditions higher than 20 g/L. In this study, a traditional, pre‐Hispanic mineral resource, known as “tequesquite,” was used as the base for the formulation of an alternative and low‐cost culture medium. Tequesquite is available from outcrop areas located in the basin of the former Lake Texcoco, where A. maxima thrived in pre‐Hispanic times. The effect on the biomass production of different tequesquite‐based formulations, varying N, P, and , was tested and compared with results obtained with Zarrouk's medium (ZM). Growth of biomass in some alternative formulations showed no significant differences compared with ZM. Production in a bubble‐column photobioreactor of the alternative medium reached a maximum of X = 2570.4 mg/L dry weight, compared with X = 2931.4 mg/L dry weight obtained with ZM. The proposed tequesquite‐medium formulation has equivalent N and P concentrations as ZM, but only 50% of NaHCO3, thus reducing the medium's cost. In addition, it avoids the use of seawater or NaCl to provide the salinity condition required for the adequate growth of Arthrospira. |
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