The influence of pH on the growth and on the formation of nutrient-stress induced scum-forming blooms in cyanobacterial cultures
Dervaux, J.; Brunet, P.
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The growth of cultures and formation of mucilage blooms in reaction to salt stress of cyanobacterial cultures are investigated with a focus on the influence of pH. In non-buffered medium, cultures show their pH increasing from 6.5 just after inoculation, up to 11 during the exponential phase. We record the time-evolution of concentration and pH, with different initial OD0. In a second set of experiments, we extract the doubling time of the unbuffered cultures in comparison with those inoculated in pH-buffered BG11 media at four different pH from 6.3 to 10.5 : in the most acid media, all cultures die or grow very slowly. At pH = 10.5, we obtain the fastest growth for all four strains, allowing to qualify these cyanobacteria as being alkaliphiles, though for all strains with comparable initial OD0, the doubling time is shorter for unbuffered cultures. Following a previous study [31]), we finally investigate the influence of pH on mucilage formation and biomass uplift induced by salt stress, involving EPS floculation by cations. Our results show that operating in buffered media significantly influences the mucilage formation, though the observed regimes cannot be simply correlated to the pH value.
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