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1.
Heliyon ; 10(10): e30498, 2024 May 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38803972

ABSTRACT

The composition of honey is mostly determined by the species-specific characteristics of flowering plants, which is reflected in the significant deviations in composition of honey varieties. The high-quality acacia honey is assessed based on both physical-chemical parameters and melissopalynology. The appearance of rape pollen in acacia honey makes the acacia honey be sorted into the multifloral honey category. Over carrying out melissopalynology, the149 samples of various honeys (acacia, rape and multifloral) have also been analysed by using physical-chemical and elemental analysis. Multivariate data analysis revealed that multifloral honey is much closer to acacia honey than to rape honey, as it can be observed from the examined unique parameters. By the PCA (Principal Component Analysis) analysis based on united set of physico-chemical and melissopalynology results the acacia and rape honey samples are entirely separated for each other, while multifloral honey samples are very close to acacia honey group and partially overlap with it. On ignoring the pollen analysis and based on the rest of the results, the multifloral honey category is almost indistinguishable from the declared and verified acacia honey category.

2.
J Biotechnol ; 381: 27-35, 2024 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38190851

ABSTRACT

Microalgae-derived biostimulants provide an eco-friendly biotechnology for improving crop productivity. The strategy of circular economy includes reducing biomass production costs of new and robust microalgae strains grown in nutrient-rich wastewater and mixotrophic culture where media is enriched with organic carbon. In this study, Chlorella sorokiniana was grown in 100 l bioreactors under sub-optimal conditions in a greenhouse. A combination of batch and semi-continuous cultivation was used to investigate the growth, plant hormone and biostimulating effect of biomass grown in diluted pig manure and in nutrient medium supplemented with Na-acetate. C. sorokiniana tolerated the low light (sum of PAR 0.99 ± 0.18 mol/photons/(m2/day)) and temperature (3.7-23.7° C) conditions to maintain a positive growth rate and daily biomass productivity (up to 149 mg/l/day and 69 mg/l/day dry matter production in pig manure and Na-acetate supplemented cultures respectively). The protein and lipid content was significantly higher in the biomass generated in batch culture and dilute pig manure (1.4x higher protein and 2x higher lipid) compared to the Na-acetate enriched culture. Auxins indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and 2-oxindole-3-acetic acid (oxIAA) and salicylic acid (SA) were present in the biomass with significantly higher auxin content in the biomass generated using pig manure (> 350 pmol/g DW IAA and > 84 pmol/g DW oxIAA) compared to cultures enriched with Na-acetate and batch cultures (< 200 pmol/g DW IAA and < 27 pmol/g DW oxIAA). No abscisic acid and jasmonates were detected. All samples had plant biostimulating activity measured in the mungbean rooting bioassay with the Na-acetate supplemented biomass eliciting higher rooting activity (equivalent to 1-2 mg/l IBA) compared to the pig manure (equivalent to 0.5-1 mg/l IBA) and batch culture (equivalent to water control) generated biomass. Thus C. sorokiniana MACC-728 is a robust new strain for biotechnology, tolerating low light and temperature conditions. The strain can adapt to alternative nutrient (pig manure) and carbon (acetate) sources with the generated biomass having a high auxin concentration and plant biostimulating activity detected with the mungbean rooting bioassay.


Subject(s)
Chlorella , Microalgae , Swine , Animals , Manure , Biomass , Acetic Acid/metabolism , Microalgae/metabolism , Carbon/metabolism , Indoleacetic Acids/metabolism
3.
Bioresour Technol ; 166: 288-94, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24926601

ABSTRACT

Anaerobe fermentation of sugar beet pressed pulp was investigated in pilot-scale digesters. Thermophilic adaptation of mesophilic culture was monitored using chemical analysis and metagenomic characterization of the sludge. Temperature adaptation was achieved by increasing the temperature gradually (2 °C day(-1)) and by greatly decreasing the OLR. During stable run, the OLR was increased gradually to 11.29 kg VS m(-3)d(-1) and biogas yield was 5% higher in the thermophilic reactor. VFA levels increased in the thermophilic reactor with increased OLR (acetic acid 646 mg L(-1), propionic acid 596 mg L(-1)), then VFA decreased and the operation was manageable beside the relative high tVFA (1300-2000 mg L(-1)). The effect of thermophilic adaptation on the microbial communities was studied using a sequencing-based metagenomic approach. Connections between physico-chemical parameters and populations of bacteria and methanogen archaea were revealed.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Bacteria, Anaerobic/physiology , Beta vulgaris/metabolism , Biofuels , Bioreactors , Methane/biosynthesis , Bacteria, Anaerobic/genetics , Bacteria, Anaerobic/metabolism , Base Sequence , Beta vulgaris/chemistry , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Computational Biology , Fermentation , Metagenome , Molecular Sequence Data , Pilot Projects , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Species Specificity , Temperature
4.
Bioresour Technol ; 102(8): 5270-5, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21367601

ABSTRACT

The anaerobic digestion of pure glycerol, which produces a baseline acetic acid to propionic acid ratio of 0.2, was studied in laboratory scale reactors (3 l working volume) at mesophilic temperature (37 °C) with 3000 mg chemical oxygen demand (COD)l(-1) d(-1). During the experiment tVFA and C2-C6 VFA analysis and daily biogas yield measurement were carried out. Following 10 days of a 15% d(-1) increase in the organic loading rate (OLR) of 3.0-10.5 g COD l(-1) d(-1), the concentration of propionic acid increased to 6200-8000 mg l(-1). Then the inoculum was divided into three parts feeding with 100% glycerol, 50% glycerol + 50% acetic acid, and 50% glycerol + 50% thick stillage, (presented in % of 2.60 g COD l(-1) d(-1) OLR), respectively. The application of co-substrates reduced the recovery period by 5 days compared to feeding with pure glycerol. When the reactors were loaded with glycerol again (10% OLR raise per day) the previously applied co-substrates had a positive effect on the VFA composition and the biogas yield as well.


Subject(s)
Glycerol/chemistry , Anaerobiosis , Fermentation
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