Production of microalgal paste in the Philippines
Technical advances have made possible the production of microalgal concentrate in paste form. Chaetoceros calcitrans was concentrated and made into an algal paste through centrifugation, chemical flocculation, and electrolytic flocculation. The paste can be stored up to three months when refrigerate...
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Philippine Science Letters
2020
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ftseafdecir:oai:repository.seafdec.org:20.500.12066/6720 2023-05-15T17:54:18+02:00 Production of microalgal paste in the Philippines de la Peña, Milagros R. Franco, Annie Martinez-Goss, Milagrosa R. Rivera, Windell Torreta, Nerissa K. 2020 http://hdl.handle.net/10862/6187 en eng Philippine Science Letters http://scienggj.org/downloads/Methods%20in%20Microalgal%20Studies.pdf#page=81 de la Peña, M. R., & Franco, A. V. (2020). Production of microalgal paste in the Philippines. In M. R. Martinez-Goss, W. L. Rivera, & N. K. Torreta (Eds.), Methods in Microalgal Studies (pp. 67–74). Los Baños, Laguna, Philippines: Philippine Science Letters; University of the Philippines Los Baños. 9789715473318 http://hdl.handle.net/10862/6187 Isolation Purification Maintenance Preservation Herbarium Philippines Algae Sterilization Disinfection Algal culture Culture media Reproduction Immobilization Cells Fixation Diatoms Light microscopy Electron microscopy Phytoplankton Chlorophylls Microscopy Microscopes Taxonomy Book chapter 2020 ftseafdecir 2022-12-14T07:26:22Z Technical advances have made possible the production of microalgal concentrate in paste form. Chaetoceros calcitrans was concentrated and made into an algal paste through centrifugation, chemical flocculation, and electrolytic flocculation. The paste can be stored up to three months when refrigerated, and is diluted with seawater for feeding to the tiger prawn, Penaeus monodon. This can also be done with other cultured diatoms, and they can be fed to other penaeid shrimp and other organisms such as the Sydney rock oyster and the Pacific oyster. The use of algal paste can simplify hatchery operations and reduce costs among hatcheries with no microalgal culture facilities. Book Part Pacific oyster DSpace @ SEAFDEC/AQD (Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, Aquaculture Department Institutional Repository - SAIR) Pacific |
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DSpace @ SEAFDEC/AQD (Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, Aquaculture Department Institutional Repository - SAIR) |
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ftseafdecir |
language |
English |
topic |
Isolation Purification Maintenance Preservation Herbarium Philippines Algae Sterilization Disinfection Algal culture Culture media Reproduction Immobilization Cells Fixation Diatoms Light microscopy Electron microscopy Phytoplankton Chlorophylls Microscopy Microscopes Taxonomy |
spellingShingle |
Isolation Purification Maintenance Preservation Herbarium Philippines Algae Sterilization Disinfection Algal culture Culture media Reproduction Immobilization Cells Fixation Diatoms Light microscopy Electron microscopy Phytoplankton Chlorophylls Microscopy Microscopes Taxonomy de la Peña, Milagros R. Franco, Annie Production of microalgal paste in the Philippines |
topic_facet |
Isolation Purification Maintenance Preservation Herbarium Philippines Algae Sterilization Disinfection Algal culture Culture media Reproduction Immobilization Cells Fixation Diatoms Light microscopy Electron microscopy Phytoplankton Chlorophylls Microscopy Microscopes Taxonomy |
description |
Technical advances have made possible the production of microalgal concentrate in paste form. Chaetoceros calcitrans was concentrated and made into an algal paste through centrifugation, chemical flocculation, and electrolytic flocculation. The paste can be stored up to three months when refrigerated, and is diluted with seawater for feeding to the tiger prawn, Penaeus monodon. This can also be done with other cultured diatoms, and they can be fed to other penaeid shrimp and other organisms such as the Sydney rock oyster and the Pacific oyster. The use of algal paste can simplify hatchery operations and reduce costs among hatcheries with no microalgal culture facilities. |
author2 |
Martinez-Goss, Milagrosa R. Rivera, Windell Torreta, Nerissa K. |
format |
Book Part |
author |
de la Peña, Milagros R. Franco, Annie |
author_facet |
de la Peña, Milagros R. Franco, Annie |
author_sort |
de la Peña, Milagros R. |
title |
Production of microalgal paste in the Philippines |
title_short |
Production of microalgal paste in the Philippines |
title_full |
Production of microalgal paste in the Philippines |
title_fullStr |
Production of microalgal paste in the Philippines |
title_full_unstemmed |
Production of microalgal paste in the Philippines |
title_sort |
production of microalgal paste in the philippines |
publisher |
Philippine Science Letters |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10862/6187 |
geographic |
Pacific |
geographic_facet |
Pacific |
genre |
Pacific oyster |
genre_facet |
Pacific oyster |
op_relation |
http://scienggj.org/downloads/Methods%20in%20Microalgal%20Studies.pdf#page=81 de la Peña, M. R., & Franco, A. V. (2020). Production of microalgal paste in the Philippines. In M. R. Martinez-Goss, W. L. Rivera, & N. K. Torreta (Eds.), Methods in Microalgal Studies (pp. 67–74). Los Baños, Laguna, Philippines: Philippine Science Letters; University of the Philippines Los Baños. 9789715473318 http://hdl.handle.net/10862/6187 |
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1766162041689604096 |