Selective Inhibition of Rice Straw Extract on Growth of Cyanobacteria and Chlorophyta

2017 
: Rice straw is supposed to be an environment-friendly biomaterial for inhibiting the growth of harmful blooms of the cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa. The effects of rice straw extract(RSE) on algal growth, morphologic parameters(cell size), and physiological parameters(in vivo Chl-a fluorescence) were investigated using flow cytometry. We examined the selective inhibitory potential of rice straw on four cyanobacterial strains(toxic and non-toxic Microcystis aeruginosa, toxic Anabaena flos-aquae, and Microcystis ichthyoblabe), in comparison with inhibitory effects on three common freshwater green algae(Selenastrum capricornutum, Chlorella pyrenoidosa, and Scenedesmus obliqnus). Concentrations from 2.0 to 10.0 g·L-1 of RSE were found to efficiently inhibit the growth of cyanobacteria in a dose-dependent manner, simultaneously modifying the in vivo Chl-a fluorescence and cell size. The 50% growth-inhibition concentration(7 d) of A. flos-aquae, M. ichthyoblabe, M. aeruginosa(toxic strain), M. aeruginosa(non-toxic strain) was 1.72, 2.21, 2.92 and 5.72 g·L-1, respectively. Interestingly, the growth and cell size of C. pyrenoidosa and S. obliqnus increased with the addition of RSE and colony formation was observed. In the case of S. capricornutum, the inhibitory effect of RSE on growth and in vivo Chl-a fluorescence occurred at 1.0-4.0 g·L-1, while RSE induced a stimulatory effect on algal growth at 8.0-10.0 g·L-1. Taken together, the sensitivity of cyanobacteria to RSE was significantly higher than that of S. capricornutum, C. pyrenoidosa and S. obliqnus. The higher sensitivity of PSⅡ reaction center of cyanobacteria and the ability to form colonies of green algae may have important implications for the species-specific allelopathic antialgal activity of rice straw.
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