Abstract:
The practical mass culture of marine microalgae faces occasionally
unexpected problems or collapse. The effect of a marine bacterium,
Flavobacterium sp., which was found to promote growth of a marine
diatom Chaetoceros gracilis in the axenic culture condition, was
examined on the mass cultures of three marine microalgae. Three
marine microalgae (C. gracilis, Isochrysis galbana, and Pavlova
lutheri) were mass cultured in 31 flatbottom flasks (2.5 1 capacity of
culture medium), in an indoor culture room at a commercial pearl
oyster hatchery. The microalgal cells and the bacterium were
inoculated at the same time, in the culture media. The specific growth
rate and maximal cell density were determined in treated cultures
(with added bacterial strain) and in controls (without added bacterial
strain). The specific growth rate of C. gracilis in treated cultures was
significantly higher than that of control cultures, and the stationary
growth phase in the treated cultures lasted longer till the end of the
culture period. However, the bacterium had no apparent effect on the
exponential growth phase of two phytoflagellates, I. galbana and P.
lutheri, but kept longer the high cell density in the stationary growth
phases. The added bacterial strain (Flavobacterium sp.) was the
dominant species (more than 45%) among the bacterial flora during
the culture period.
(Diponegoro Univ., Fac. Fisheries and Marine Sci., Dept. Fisheries,
Kampus Tambalang, Semarang 50239, Indonesia)
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