4.6 Article

Kinetics Growth and Recovery of Valuable Nutrients from Selangor Peat Swamp and Pristine Forest Soils Using Different Extraction Methods as Potential Microalgae Growth Enhancers

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26030653

Keywords

biocatalysis; Chlorella vulgaris (TRG 4C); dissolved organic carbon; soil extraction; total dissolved nitrogen; total dissolved phosphorous; Nannochloropsis oceanica (TRG 3A)

Funding

  1. Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia (MOHE)
  2. Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST)/Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) [JPMJSA1509]

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The study explores the use of virgin soils from Peninsular Malaysia as growth enhancers for microalgae, finding that autoclave extraction method at 121 degrees C twice is the most effective in promoting growth. This method results in higher concentrations of total dissolved nitrogen, total dissolved phosphorus, and dissolved organic carbon in the soil extracts, ultimately reducing the cost and need for synthetic medium in microalgae cultivation. The high recovery rate of nutrients from the soil extracts presents a significant potential as a growth promoter for microalgae.
Soil extracts are useful nutrients to enhance the growth of microalgae. Therefore, the present study attempts for the use of virgin soils from Peninsular Malaysia as growth enhancer. Soils collected from Raja Musa Forest Reserve (RMFR) and Ayer Hitam Forest Reserve (AHFR) were treated using different extraction methods. The total dissolved nitrogen (TDN), total dissolved phosphorus (TDP), and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations in the autoclave methods were relatively higher than natural extraction with up to 132.0 mg N/L, 10.7 mg P/L, and 2629 mg C/L, respectively for RMFR. The results of TDN, TDP, and DOC suggested that the best extraction methods are autoclaved at 121 degrees C twice with increasing 87%, 84%, and 95%, respectively. Chlorella vulgaris TRG 4C dominated the growth at 121 degrees C twice extraction method in the RMRF and AHRF samples, with increasing 54.3% and 14%, respectively. The specific growth rate (mu) of both microalgae were relatively higher, 0.23 d(-1) in the Ayer Hitam Soil. This extract served well as a microalgal growth promoter, reducing the cost and the needs for synthetic medium. Mass production of microalgae as aquatic feed will be attempted eventually. The high recovery rate of nutrients has a huge potential to serve as a growth promoter for microalgae.

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