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Article

Production of Microalgal Slow-Release Fertilizer by Valorizing Liquid Agricultural Digestate: Growth Experiments with Tomatoes

1
APESA, Plateau Technique, Cap Ecologia, 64230 Lescar, France
2
Institute of Technology of Agricultural Products, Hellenic Agricultural Organization-Demeter (HAO-Demeter), Leof. Sofokli Venizelou 1, Lykovrysi, 14123 Athens, Greece
3
IATE, Montpellier University, INRAE, Agro Institut, 34060 Montpellier, France
4
School of Agriculture, Fertilizing and Environment, Mohammed VI Polytechnic University (UM6P), 43150 Ben Guerir, Morocco
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Appl. Sci. 2020, 10(11), 3890; https://doi.org/10.3390/app10113890
Submission received: 5 May 2020 / Revised: 27 May 2020 / Accepted: 27 May 2020 / Published: 3 June 2020
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Trends on Algal Biotechnology for a Circular Economy)

Abstract

:
Anaerobic Digestion (AD) is a process that is well-known and fast-developing in Europe. AD generates large amounts of digestate, especially in livestock-intensive areas. Digestate has potential environmental issues due to nutrients (such as nitrogen) lixiviation or volatilization. Using liquid digestate as a nutrient source for microalgae growth is considered beneficial because digestate could be valorized and upgraded by the production of an added value product. In this work, microalgal biomass produced using liquid digestate from an agricultural biogas plant was investigated as a slow-release fertilizer in tomatoes. Monoraphidium sp. was first cultivated at different dilutions (1:20, 1:30, 1:50), in indoor laboratory-scale trials. The optimum dilution factor was determined to be 1:50, with a specific growth rate of 0.13 d−1 and a complete nitrogen removal capacity in 25 days of culture. Then, outdoor experiments were conducted in a 110 dm3 vertical, closed photobioreactors (PBRs) in batch and semi-continuous mode with 1:50 diluted liquid digestate. During the batch mode, the microalgae were able to remove almost all NH4+ and 65 (±13) % of PO43−, while the microalgal growth rate reached 0.25 d−1. After the batch mode, the cultures were switched to operate under semi-continuously conditions. The cell densities were maintained at 1.3 × 107 cells mL−1 and a biomass productivity around 38.3 mg TSS L−1 d−1 during three weeks was achieved, where after that it started to decline due to unfavorable weather conditions. Microalgae biomass was further tested as a fertilizer for tomatoes growth, enhancing by 32% plant growth in terms of dry biomass compared with the control trials (without fertilization). Similar performances were achieved in tomato growth using synthetic fertilizer or digestate. Finally, the leaching effect in soils columns without plant was tested and after 25 days, only 7% of N was leached when microalgae were used, against 50% in the case of synthetic fertilizer.

Graphical Abstract

1. Introduction

Anaerobic digestion (AD) is one of the oldest biological process for the valorization of organic wastes into biogas [1,2]. AD consists of a sequence of processes that involve microorganisms that in the absence of oxygen break organic matter down producing biogas. Over the last decades, digestion capacity in Europe has been increasing rapidly [2]. Many industrial digesters have been built in European countries such as Italy, France, being Germany the largest producer. Anaerobic digestion plants have increased up to 18,202 in 2018, achieving a production of 63,511 GWh ofbiogas. The main product obtained from AD is biogas that consists mainly of 50–75% CH4 and 25–50% CO2 that can be converted into electricity and heat (Combined Heat and Power plants; CHP), injected in the Natural Gas Grid, or used as transportation fuel, whereas the digestate (residues after digestion) typically are used as crop fertilizer and/or soil amendment [3,4].
For a better management of digestates they are often separated into solid and liquid fractions. Solid-liquid separation of digestate presents many advantages, allowing a better management. The solid fraction, which is rich in dry matter, N and P; is often used as soil amendment to return nutrients back to the fields [4,5]. The liquid fraction has been reported to have high contents in K and N, mainly in its form of ammonia, and it is characterized for a higher N/P ratio than in the solid fraction and generally used as liquid crop fertilizer [5,6].
Nonetheless, large amounts of digestate are currently produced due to the increased number of biogas plants operated, especially in some intensive livestock’s area. Digestate engenders some environmental problems related to the greenhouse-gas emissions during storage, its intensive transportation needs [4,7], and due to the leaching or evaporation of nutrients during land application [8,9]. Moreover, the use of digestate on agricultural land is regulated by European EU Directive 91/676/EC, that stablish Nitrate Vulnerable Zones (NVZ) where the annual amount of nitrogen that is applied to the land by spreading does not exceed 170 kg per hectare. For all these reasons, digestate management has become a major bottleneck of the biogas industry and several alternative digestate valorization routes are under investigation [4,10,11]. One promising solution for the recovery of nutrients in the liquid digestate is microalgae cultivation [8,12,13]. Indeed, microalgae can efficiently remove the nutrients from digestate while producing high-value biomass that can be used for the production of biochemical, biomaterials, fertilizers and/or biofuels [12,14,15]. Since digestates are rich in macronutrients (N, P, K, S, Ca and Mg) [16,17,18] and thanks to its ability to uptake nutrients from media, microalgae seem a potential solution to remediate nutrients present in liquid digestate from agricultural biogas plants. For instance, Zuliani et al. (2016) have investigated the cultivation of Chlorella vulgaris on different anaerobic digestates deriving from municipal wastewater, sewage sludge or agro-waste treatment plants in closed photobioreactor [13]. Nonetheless, considering microalgae cultivation on liquid digestate, two major issues should be addressed as the high turbidity of liquid digestate caused by suspended materials and its high ammonia content that can significantly affect the microalgae growth efficiency [8,11,19]. Xia and Murphy (2016) reported that concentration of total ammonia nitrogen (TAN) varying from 50 to 260 mg/L of TAN can inhibit the microalgae growth [11]. For these purposes, two mains strategies that have been investigated in literature data are dilution of the digestate with water [12,13] or liquid digestate treatments to alleviate its toxicity [8,15,19].Until now, diverse technologies of reactors have been used in microalgae cultivation by means of open systems raceway, tubular, column and flat photobioreactors [20], with Chlorella sp. being one of the main microalgae species investigated in literature [12,13,21].
The cultivation of microalgae using Anaerobic Liquid Digestate (ALD) is of particular interest because it provides a production scheme that falls inside the context of a circular bioeconomy, by recycling valuable nutrients and the simultaneously producing of valuable biomass that can be further utilized as a feedstock for a biorefinery platform [17]. However, microalgae cultivated in liquid digestate or wastewaters, which typically contain various hazardous contaminants, and could potentially contaminate the produced biomass, raise various concerns about the safety of their consumption restricting their use for human applications [17]. For this purpose, microalgae used as slow-released bio-fertilizers or bio-stimulants have been recently investigated obtaining promising results and can be considered as an eco-friendly solution avoiding chemical pollution especially by leaching or evaporation of nutrients as it happens when synthetic fertilizers or liquid digestate are directly applied in land [22,23].
Besides crops growth efficiency due to the utilization of nutrients, microalgae have also been found to have a biostimuling effect and improving crop yields [22,23]. Microalgae can be applied directly in soil [24,25,26,27] or through foliar application [23,25,28]. For instance, Dineshkumar et al. (2018) produced Chlorella vulgaris and Spirulina platensis to employ them as fertilizer in rice growth experiments [29]. As a result, the application with microalgae improved the plant growth rate (in dry weight) by 69% and 71% compared to the control (soil alone), respectively for Chlorella vulgaris and Spirulina platensis. Similarly, Garcia-Gonzalez and Sommerfeld (2015) cultivated tomatoes using the microalgal Acuodesmus dimorphus as fertilizer. The application of microalgae as fertilizers enhanced the plant growth rate (shoots + roots) by 50–325% and by 25–53% the number of branches in comparison with the associated control [25].
Nonetheless, the application of microalgae as fertilizers for crop production is not yet well studied and more research is needed. Moreover, the use of microalgae cultivated in liquid digestate for slow-released fertilizer is still in its infancy. Thus, in this study, the feasibility of Monoraphidium sp. cultivation in liquid digestate for nutrients remediation coupled with the production of algae-based bio-fertilizers was investigated by means of (1) a preliminary microalgae indoor cultivations tests, where several liquid digestate dilution ratio (1:20; 1:30; 1:50) where investigated; (2) a pilot-scale outdoor cultivation in column photobioreactors of 110 dm3 at the optimal dilution rate; and (3) performing agronomic trials with nutrient leaching columns tests and plant growth pot tests on tomatoes in comparison with synthetic fertilizers and liquid digestate applied at 170 kg N/ha.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Microalgae, Soil and Liquid Digestate Origin

Microscopically identified Monoraphidium sp. was isolated from a lake in Lescar (France) and cultivated in BG-11 medium (Sigma Aldrich) (Dineshkumar et al., 2018). Monoraphidium sp. is a unicellular microalga sizing 2–182 µm in length and 1–8 µm in width; the cells are straight to lunate to sigmoid or helically twisted, often with elongate ends (https://www.algaebase.org). ALD was obtained from an agricultural biogas plant located in Préchacq-Navarrenx (France), which is operated in mesophilic conditions using as feeding substrates mainly crop residues and animal manure. In this case, the biogas plant separates the digestate into a liquid and solid fraction by a screw press separator. Once collected, the ALD was centrifuged and filtered with a 25 μm filter in the laboratory in order to prepare it for further use as a growth medium supplement for microalgae cultivation and was conserved at 3 °C until its use. The chemical characterization of ALD has been reported in Table 1. The pH (25 °C) was of 8.6 and the conductivity of 3640 µS cm−1. Zuliani et al. (2016) reported value of pH varying from 7.6 to 8.2 for digestate of various origin (i.e., municipal wastewater, sewage sludge or agro-waste treatment plants) [13]. For the other parameters, results are in adequation with previous studies that investigated the chemical composition of liquid digestate [6,9,13]. The TKN was of 455 g N/kg TS and the ammonium content of 255 g N/kg representing 56% of the TKN. Akhiar et al. (2017) reported on several agro-industrial digestates proportion of ammonium ranging from 16% to 72% of the TKN [6]. As concerns the heavy metals, higher concentrations were found for Cu and Zn with 79.5 and 207 mg/kg TS respectively and these are generally due to the use of animal slurries in the feeding of the AD plant [9]. Indeed, these two elements are used as additives to stimulate livestock growth and prevent pig and cattle diseases [9].
The soil employed for the plant growth tests was obtained from a 10 cm to 30 cm layer from a farm located in Montpellier region in France (Inrae from Mauguio). The soil was composed of 20% of clay, 30% of sand and 50% of silt. Air-dried soil was sieved (<4 mm) and stored (15 °C) until the beginning of the experiments. The soil was composed of organic matter (1.9%), C/N ratio (10.1), pH (7.4), total nitrogen (0.11%), P2O5 (0.096 g/kg), K2O (0.386 g/kg) and MgO (0.195 g/kg).

2.2. Indoor Batch Cultivation of Microalgae Testing Various Digestate Dilution

The purpose of these experiments was to evaluate the algal growth performances at different dilution rates of ALD. Dilution of ALD was considered as a necessary step in order to alleviate its toxicity due to high ammonium and turbidity content [8,19]. A seeding of these cultures was carried out on ALD at different dilution concentrations (dilution of 1:20, 1:30 and 1:50 using distilled water). The culture was carried out on a laboratory scale, in a growth shelf, using 2-dm3 bottles (cf. Figure S1). Cells were inoculated into the medium at a proportion of 20% (v/v). Each batch was performed in duplicate and started from an initial algae biomass concentration of 0.14 gTSS L−1. The cultures were artificially illuminated (33.75 µmol m2 s−1) and bubbled with a mix of air and carbon dioxide (0.2%vCO2/vair) controlled by a mass flow meter from Aalborg®. Temperature was kept at room values (21–23 °C). Irradiance was provided by warm-white fluorescent lamps. The light intensity was measured from the outer surface of the crystal bottles using a LX-105 Digital Light LUX meter RS232 and then converted into PAR flux (µmol m2 s−1) by multiplying the calibration factor (0.0135 in the case of cool white fluorescent lamps). Microalgae growth was daily followed by determining Optical Density (OD) at 680 nm with a UV-visible spectrometer (7315, Jenway, United Kingdom), after proper dilution with deionized water to obtain absorbance values between zero and one.
The specific growth rate in the exponential phase of the algal growth was measured using Equation (1).
μ   ( d a y 1 ) = ( L n X 2 L n X 1 ) / ( t 1 t 2 )
where X2 and X1 are the Cell numbers (Cells/µL) at time t2 and t1, respectively.
In parallel, the nutrient removal efficiency was also calculated according the Equation (2) below:
NRE (%) = 100 − (100*Ct/Co)
where Co and Ct are the nutrient concentrations (mg/L) at the beginning of the experiment and end of the experiment respectively.

2.3. Outdoor Photo-Bioreactors Cultivation of Microalgae on the Best Dilution Ratio

The best dilution ratio (1:50) obtained in the first screening tests was further applied for microalgae cultivation in outdoor condition to be the most representative of further industrial-scale. For this purpose, Monoraphidium sp. was cultivated outdoors, between August and November 2019, in a 110 dm3 (0.29 m × 1.65 m) vertical closed photobioreactors with an active volume of 73 dm3 located in Lescar (France) (Figure 1 and Figure S2). Tap water was used to formulate the culture medium, where ALD was used as nutrients source at a dilution ratio of 1:50. The first batch started with an initial algae biomass concentration of 0.12 gTSS/L. The culture was bubbled with air and the pH maintained within a desired range (pH 7.3–8.1, with a set point of 7.7) to support algae growth. The pH was controlled by a pH meter and was regulated by CO2 injection in the system through a solenoid valve. When the pH reached the set point (7.7), the controller opened the valve to allow CO2 injection, so that CO2 reduces pH level.
First, three experiments in batch mode were carried out in order to optimize the photo-bioreactor performance and to define the optimal retention time. Once the system was optimized, the culture was switched to semi-continuous mode which lasted from September to November 2019. The retention time applied was 15 days and the feeding of ALD was performed using a peristatic pump (Figure 1). Climatological data in Lescar region were extracted from the website of “Meteo France” (http://www.meteofrance.com/accueil).
Microalgae growth was daily monitored by determining Optical Density (OD) at 680 nm with a UV-visible spectrometer (7315, Jenway, United Kingdom), after proper dilution with deionized water to obtain absorbance values between zero and one. In parallel, the microalgae growth was measured by counting cells system using Malassez method (Absher, M. 1973, Blaubrand®, Germany). Briefly, Malassez method consists of a thick glass microscope slide (Malassez) with a rectangular indentation that creates a chamber of a well-known volume, so the number of contained cells can be determined. Light microscopy was carried out using a Zeiss Axioskop 2 equipped with an AxioCam MRc camera.
Total suspended solids (TSS) were measured by filtering 5–15 mL culture solution through a glass fiber filter (Whatman GF/A). TSS was determined gravimetrically as a difference of the filters before and after drying at 105 °C for 24 h.
The microalgae biomass was harvested during the semi-continuous phase by drying it at 70 °C, and it was then conserved at room temperature in a dry container. The Equation (3) was applied in order to calculate the biomass productivity (P):
P = ( D W i D W 0 ) / ( t i t 0 )
where DWi and DW0 are the Dry Weights (gTSS L−1) at time ti and t0 (initial time), respectively.

2.4. Physicochemical Analysis

The culture pH was measured using a VWR pHenomenal® pH portable set pH 1100 H. Each filter, containing the suspended solids, was dried at 105 °C overnight and then weighed. Nitrogen and phosphorus consumption were analyzed during the trial by spectrophotometry. The analyses were accomplished by centrifuging the samples at 5000 rpm during 15 min in a centrifuge (Rotanta 460, Hettich Centrifuges, United Kingdom). The supernatant was analyzed with Spectroquant cell tests, specific for each nutrient. In all cases, the nutrients concentration was measured by a photometer PhotoLab S6 WTW. The elemental composition of the produced microalgal biomass (C, H, N, S) was analyzed in duplicate using an elemental analyzer (varioMicro V4.0.2, Elementar®, Germany). Micro- and macro-elements analysis were performed by digesting 38.5 mg of sample in 2 mL of HNO3 (68%) and 5 mL of distilled water, in a closed vessel microwave digester. The solutions were analyzed by inductively coupling plasma spectrometry-optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES Agilent 720).

2.5. Agronomic Trials on Microalgae Biomass

The agronomic value of microalgal biomass produced in the photo-bioreactor was investigated through phytotoxicity tests and nutrients leaching tests in columns in comparison with liquid digestate and synthetic fertilizers. Plants trials with seeds of tomatoes (Solanum Lycopersicum) were performed in small pots with a volume of 0.5 dm3, placed in a standard growth chamber (Fitotron, SGC 120 Weiss Gallenkamp, United Kingdom) under controlled conditions. During the trials, the environmental conditions were the following ones: day duration 16 h at 25 °C under 4600 lux (62.1 µmol m2 s−1), in 60% relative humidity, whereas night conditions were 8 h darkness at 18 °C in 80% relative humidity. Four conditions were tested: (1) soil alone (control), (2) soil + synthetic fertilizers, (3) soil + digestate and (4) soil + dried microalgal biomass. A dose of 170 kg N/ha was applied for the three last trials, according to the limits stablished by EU regulations for land application of fertilizers near watercourses (EU Directive 91/676/EC). For synthetic fertilizer, N sources was provided by ammonium nitrate. For P dosage of synthetic fertilizers, monopotassium phosphate was applied at 22 kg P/ha, same proportion than in liquid digestate. Such doses are within the range of N and P application rates for different crops systems [30]. The mixtures of soil and fertilizers sources were prepared into 10 cm diameter plastic pots and the mixture was brought to 70% of the water holding gravimetric capacity. Six tomato seeds were planted in each pot using four replicates for each condition. Each pot was manually watered every 24 h by weighing and adding water to achieve the initial weight. Once 70% of control seeds germination was obtained, four seeds of tomatoes were let in each pot, to make space for the plants to growth during the first vegetative stage. After 47 days, the leaves of each plant were counted before being harvested by cutting them at the soil level. Then, the biomass was dried for 48 h at 70 °C in a forced air oven, and finally weighted. For each condition, germination index (expressed in percent) of the initial seeds and biomass dry matter were measured and calculated as follows (Equations (4) and (5)):
G e r m i n a t i o n   I n d e x   ( % ) = F i n a l   n u m b e r   o f   s e e d s   t h a t   g e r m i n a t e d N u m b e r   o f   i n i t i a l   s e e d s × 100
D r y   w e i g h t   ( g T S / 100   p l a n t s ) = D r y   w e i g h t   o f   h a r v e s t e d   p l a n t s   ( 70   ° C ) N u m b e r   o f   p l a n t s × 100
Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was carried out to compare variables means. The results of plant growth were analyzed to classify the significant differences compared to the control (i.e., soil alone), the confidence level considered was 95%. Elementary analysis (C, H, N, S) have been determined using an elemental analyzer (varioMicro V4.0.2, Elementar®, Germany). The method employed for determination of Chlorophyll a, Chlorophyll b and carotenoids was adapted from the one used by [31]. Accurately weighted 0.5 g of fresh plant leaf sample was homogenized with 10 mL of methanol. The mixture was centrifuged 8000 rpm for 20 min (Rotanta 460, Hettich Centrifuges, United Kingdom). The supernatant was separated and 0.5 mL of it was mixed with 4.5 mL of methanol. The solution was analyzed in a spectrophotometer (7315, Jenway, United Kingdom). Equations to determine concentrations (µg ml−1) of chlorophyll a (Ch a), chlorophyll b (Ch b) and total carotenoids (Ca) by methanol as solvent are as follows:
C h   a = 16.72   A 665 9.16   A 652
C h   b = 34.09   A 652 15.28   A 665
C a = ( 1000   A 470 1.63   C h   a 104.96   C h   b ) / 221
A method adapted from [32], was used to carry out leaching nutrients without plants. This study was intended to represent a worst-case scenario with extremely heavy rainfall just after adding the different fertilizers [33]. The leaching columns were designed using a 50 mL plastipak medical syringe (with the piston removed). Each column was fixed with filter papers (glass microfiber filter GF/F, diameter 25 mm), and each contained 15 g of quartz sand. Then, 20 g of each soil mixture was added including the four conditions: (1) soil alone (control), (2) soil + synthetic fertilizers, (3) soil + liquid digestate and (4) soil + dried microalgae biomass. The top of each column was also covered with parafilm in order to avoid water evaporation. Finally, 20 g of quartz sand was used to fill the soil columns to the top to avoid soil disturbance during leaching. Each treatment was replicated three times and fertilizers were applied as a rate of 170 kg N/ha. After, deionized water was added to the soil columns to obtain 100% of water holding capacity (WHC), then, the columns were incubated at 20 °C. After 3, 6, 12, 18, 25 days, 20 mL of deionized water was added to the top of columns corresponding to 450 mm of precipitation during a 25 days period. Then the leachate volume was recorded (after approximately 7 h). The cations (NH4+) and anions (NO3, NO2) concentrations in the leachate were measured by an ICS-3000 Ion Chromatography System after centrifugation of the digestate in 2-mL Eppendorf® tubes, followed by filtration at 0.2 µm (Nylon membrane, Acrodisc®).

3. Results and Discussions

3.1. Impact of Liquid-Digestate Dilution on Microalgae Growth on Batch Conditions

Microalgae growth was tested by using three different digestate dilution (1:20; 1:30; 1:50) as culture media. The optimum dilution factor of the digestate was studied in batch mode in indoor condition in order to determine its feasibility as nutrient supplier for microalgae growth. Growth characteristics of Monoraphidium sp. cultivated in digestate diluted 1:20, 1:30 and 1:50 where investigated within 25 days as shown in Figure 2. As a result, specific growth of 0.03, 0.05 and 0.13 d−1 were calculated for digestate dilutions of L 20, L 30 and L 50 respectively (Figure 2a). In the case of low diluted digestate (L 20), the microalgae growth noticeable decelerated after 12 days, due to probably the high turbidity and the high initial ammonium concentration (98.8 mg L−1), which can presents toxicity for microalgae cells [11,19]. Dhup et al. (2014) reported similar specific growth rate ranging from 0.05 and 0.09 d−1 when the microalgae Monoraphidium sp. T4X was cultivated under six different nitrate concentration [34]. Our results and dilution rate applied are quite lower to previous studies that investigated microalgae growth on diluted digestate but using different microalgae species [12,13,35]. Franchino et al. (2013) have investigated the cultivation of three microalgae strains (Neochloris oleoabundans, Chlorella vulgaris and Scenedesmus obliquus) on an agro-zootechnical digestate at different dilution ratios (1:10; 1:15; 1:20: 1:25) [12]. At a dilution rate of 1:20, specific growth rate of 0.26, 0.23, 0.49 d−1 were respectively observed for Neochloris oleoabundans, Scenedesmus obliquus and Chlorella vulgaris [12]. Uggetti et al. (2014) reported value of growth rate for Scenedesmus sp. ranging from 0.04 to 0.9 d−1 at different inoculum/substrate ratio [35]. The dilution ratio that should be applied to improve microalgae growth by minimizing ammonia and turbidity toxicity is highly dependent on the liquid digestate nature and origin but value from literature are ranging from 1:10 until 1:100 [12,19,36]. To improve the overall environmental and economic feasibility of the process, it can be planned as future works to replace part of the tap water by agro-industrial wastewaters to reduce the ALD turbidity.
The batch with higher dilution has better response to nutrients assimilation; therefore, microalgae growth is more feasible. After 25 days, 34, 66 and 100% of NH4+ were removed from media, from less to more diluted digestate respectively (Table 2). Similarly, P removal of 0, 77 and 92% were observed from less to more diluted digestate respectively. Nutrient removal efficiency for N and P is in agreement with previous studies that investigated microalgae growth on diluted digestate [12,19]. At day 19, the culture with the lowest dilution collapsed and was not able to assimilate more nutrients (Figure 2c,d).

3.2. Cultivation of Microalgae in Outdoor Conditions

To validate the scenario observed in batch indoor conditions, outdoor microalgae growth was also investigated in photobioreactor of 110 dm3 applying a liquid digestate dilution 1:50 (Figure S2). Two basic cultivation regimes were investigated as batch and semi-continuous regime. In the batch regime, the culture was inoculated and at a certain point of growth was harvested. In the continuous regime, the culture was harvested continuously according to its growth rate and fresh medium was added [37]. Figure 3a shows the temperature and sunlight hours registered during cultivation time of Monoraphidium sp. for a better understanding of the microalgae-growth behavior and nutrients removal from the media. For the batch mode trials, the temperature ranged from 14 °C to 25 °C and the average sun exposition from 5 to 10 h. During the semi-continuous trials, meteorological conditions for the three first weeks were similar to batches but further degraded with temperature ranging from 8 °C to 13 °C and an average sun exposition of only 2 h.
Interestingly, the specific growth rate for the outdoor batches was higher than in indoor conditions with specific growth rate of 0.25, 0.14 and 0.21 d−1 respectively for B1, B2 and B3 (Figure 3b, Table 2). Biomass productivity of 43.3; 31.7 and 39.8 mg TSS L−1 d−1 were obtained for respectively B1, B2 and B3. At steady growth, biomass yields of 0.77, 0.57 and 0.68 g TSS.L−1 where respectively achieved for the B1, B2 and B3 batches. It is most probably that the higher specific growth rates obtained in outdoor compared to the indoor conditions was due probably to the higher light illumination (Table 2). During the three batches, microalgae outdoor cultivation demonstrated high nutrient-removal capacity of up to 100% NH4+ and 64.77% P (PO4−3) (Figure 3c,d and Table 2). Only when ammonium was exhausted, did nitrates start to be consumed, as indicated in Figure 3c. Nitrogen is assimilated by the cells in different forms; ammonium (NH4+) and nitrates (NO3), being ammonium the preferred as a nitrogen source [18]. In less amount, phosphorus also played an important role, as it constitutes important molecules for microalgae growth [11,18,38]. Once the third batch was completed, the system was shifted in a semi-continuous mode. During three weeks of operation the microalgal performances remained stable with cell densities in the level at 1.3 × 107 cells mL−1. Then, the microalgae growth started to decline because of the unfavorable meteorological conditions.
Several other studies have reported microalgae cultivation in outdoor conditions [21,39,40]. First of all, Rezanka et al. (2017) have investigated the cultivation of the Monoraphidium sp. CCALA 1094 microalgae strain in synthetic medium in outdoor 150 L thin-layer photobioreactor under early winter conditions of Central Europe [40]. The specific growth rate over the 22 days of the pilot cultivation reached a value of 0.341 d−1 which is in the same range as the results of the present study [40]. Similarly, Chlorella sp. was cultivated in digestate (non-diluted) by conducting an outdoors experiment in an open pond semi-continuously for 37 days. With natural light in the range between 215–700 µmol photons m2 s−1 and 0–25 °C, a productivity of 17.4 mg L−1 d−1 of microalgae biomass was obtained [21]. Similarly, Prajapati et al., (2014) reported biomass yield of 0.79 g TSS.L−1 when the microalgae Chroococcus sp. was cultivated on diluted digestate by 1:30 [36]. Barreiro-Vescovo et al. (2020) also investigated a microalgae consortium in outdoor batch and semi-continuous experiments in a 4.5 m2 raceway pond in summer and early autumn seasons on OFMSW liquid digestate fraction diluted at 1:20 for the batch mode and 1:10 for the semi-continuous mode [41]. From day 0 to 35, the biomass concentration and productivity increased until a maximum value of 0.74 g TSS L−1 and 6.9 g TSS m2 d−1. After day 35, the concentration of TSS started to decrease until minimum values close to 0.13–0.31 g TSS L−1 corresponding to productivity values of 1.2–2.9 g TSS m2 d−1 [41]. Finally Marin et al. (2018) investigated seasonal variation of biogas upgrading coupled with digestate treatment in outdoors raceway ponds on a microalgae consortium [39]. In this study, process operation was carried out from 1 November 2016 to 30 October 2017. Areal biomass productivity ranged from 0.0 g TSS m−2 d−1 in winter to 22.5 g TSS m−2 d−1 in summer [39].
The elemental composition of the produced biomass of Monoraphidium sp. was 30.62 ± 0.22% C, 4.04 ± 0.03% H, 3.27 ± 0.26% N and 0.85 ± 0.02% S (Table 3). Low carbon and nitrogen content was reported in the microalgae compared with the results of other authors [42,43]. Lower carbon and nitrogen concentration can be explained by the higher ash content from microalgae but also from mineral residual faction of the digestate as the overall microalgae medium was oven dried. Microalgae was also composed of other nutrients (K, P, Ca, Mg) which are reported in Table 3.

3.3. Agronomic Trials by Plant Growth and Lixiviation Tests

The results of Germination Index (GI) (Figure 4a and Table 4) showed that in the trials with soil (without any treatment) GI reached 100% whereas values of 96, 79 and 92% were obtained for pots amended with synthetic fertilizer, digestate and microalgae biomass respectively. However, according to the ANOVA test, no statistically significant differences were obtained. The slight drop in GI for the digestate samples can be explain by some soluble compounds (VFAs, ammonium, trace elements) that might inhibit the germination [3,44,45] In general rules, from literature data, no negative effect on germination were observed from digestate at high dilution rate, while high concentrations showed germination inhibition [3,44]. Then, the impact of the three fertilizations (i.e., synthetic fertilizers, liquid digestate, microalgae added at 170 kg N/ha) is shown in Figure 4a. Plant dried biomass was 24.8 ± 0.8, 25.1 ± 2.5 and 25.6 ± 1.2 g TS/100 plants for respectively synthetic fertilizers, liquid digestate and microalgae showing similar efficiency between microalgae and synthetic fertilizers for same N supply. In other words, microalgae bio-fertilizer enhanced tomato growth by 32% in terms of total plant dried biomass compared to the control (i.e., soil without any fertilizer). Similarly, synthetic fertilizers and liquid digestate lead to 27% and 29% enhancement of the plant dried biomass in comparison to the soil control. Such results demonstrate that microalgae were as effective for growth tomatoes as other fertilizer sources during the first vegetative growth stage (ANOVA p < 0.05). Similarly, in the case of leaves number (Figure 4b), 45, 43 and 32% more leaves were found in plants amended with synthetic fertilizer, digestate and microalgae biomass, respectively in comparison with the control tests (soil without fertilization) which it is also an indication of the plant health. Finally, in terms of pigments content (i.e., chlorophyll and carotenoids) (Figure 4c), adding microalgae biomass improved the pigments contents compared to the control trials (without fertilization) but the enhancement was lower compared to the synthetic fertilizer and liquid digestate application. This is probably due to a reduction in the absorption of nutrients needed for chlorophyll production by the plants, especially mineral nitrogen. Contrary to synthetic fertilizers and liquid digestate, nitrogen is available in microalgae in the form of organic nitrogen and should be mineralized before to be used by plants. Likewise, Mulbry et al. (2005) found that only around 3% of the biomass N was available as mineral N at the time of application and approximately 33% of algal N was converted to plant-available N within 21 days [26].
The elemental composition of the tomato plants grown in different conditions is given in Table 4. Similar C content were found for all the conditions. The most noticeable results were observed for nitrogen in the plants cultivated in soil alone (control) and microalgae fertilizers, where N content was lower than those found in the composition of tomato plants cultivated in the synthetic fertilizers and liquid digestate.
The benefits of using liquid digestate or microalgae to enhance growth plant tests have been previously demonstrated to be as efficient as synthetic fertilizers [26,30]. Table 5 shows different studies from literature data that used microalgal biomass as fertilizer for plants growth. Microalgae has been used as fertilizers for the cultivation of various plants and vegetables such as: tomatoes [25,43], millet crops [46], corn [26,27], lettuce [24], cucumber [26], arugula [47] and bayam red [47]. Nonetheless, only one study until yet have reported the use of microalgae cultivated in liquid digestate from biogas plant to be used as fertilizers. In this study, Mulbry et al. (2005) investigated the use of an algal consortium to be used for the cultivation of cucumber and corn plants [26]. For the two plants investigated, algae used as fertilizers lead to an enhancement of the growth plant in comparison with no fertilization and similar results were observed between microalgae and synthetic fertilizers [26]. Wuang et al. (2016) studied the potential of cultivating Spirulina platensis with fish wastewater for production of algae fertilizers [47]. Spirulina-based fertilizers demonstrated to enhance plant growth in leafy vegetables such as Bayam red [47]. The spirulina-based fertilizers enhanced plants growth in comparison with no fertilization and give similar results than synthetic fertilizers (9.06 gTS for Spirulina sp. vs. 9.52 gTS for synthetic fertilizers) [47]. Castro et al. 2017 studied the effect of algal biomass cultivated in industrial wastewaters on millet crops [46]. Outdoors experiments were conducted in Brazil during 60 days with three different treatments: control (soil), algal biomass and synthetic fertilizer. As a result, the fertilized soils with microalgae improve the biomass yield of 54% in comparison to the control, in terms of dry biomass (shoot and leaf) obtained per hectare. Furthermore, no significant differences were found between soils fertilized with algal biomass and synthetic fertilizer [46]. Finally, Garcia-Gonzalez and Sommerfeld (2015) also investigated the effect of microalgae (Acutodesmus dimorphus LARB-0414) fertilizers on the tomatoes growth [25]. Microalgae were applied at the transplantation or 22 days prior the transplantation of tomatoes plants. Both configurations improve the tomatoes growth in comparison with the control without fertilization. Nonetheless, applying microalgae 22 days prior transplantation at a concentration of 50 g lead to an enhancement of the biomass production. Indeed biomass production of 153 g and 547 g were respectively noticed for the fertilization at the time of transplant and 22 days prior the time of transplant [25].
According to many authors [26,46,47], even growing plants with microalgae biomass wasn’t better than those grown with synthetic fertilizers or digestate, the use of microalgal biomass for fertilizing purposes presents some important advantages. Microalgal biomass can be considered as a slow-released fertilizer since the application of dried biomass to soils would not result in emissions nitrous oxide and ammonia volatilization, as is the case of digestates [7,46]. Microalgae biomass presents other advantages over synthetic fertilizers because it is not as pollutant as synthetic fertilizers and microalgae cultivation contributes to the upgrading of the liquid digestate phases without losing fertilizers properties.
In parallel, to assess the benefits of using microalgae fertilizers against synthetic fertilizers or liquid digestate as a way to reduce nutrients leaching, the effect of the three fertilization methods (at 170 kg N/ha) was studied using nutrients leaching columns to understand the N (NH4+, NO2 and NO3) leaching once applied the fertilizers in soil. This study was intended to represent a worst-case scenario with extremely heavy rainfall just after adding the different fertilizers. During the 25 days of experiment, similar leachate volumes were recovered from all soil columns (around 18 mL per leaching event). As shown in Figure 5, the soil amended with synthetic fertilizer presented a major loss of N. Interestingly, with microalgae fertilization, only 7% of N was leached, compared to 50% in the case of synthetic fertilizer and 24% for the liquid digestate.
The results showed that microalgal biomass retains N better and release it slowly. This slow-releasing nature can be explained because N is in the organic form in microalgal biomass that need to be mineralized to be leached in the mineral form [26]. Sogn et al. (2018) also performed leaching nutrients during seven days in columns without plant growth on industrial fertilizers and several digestates on various soils (i.e., loam, sand, slit) [33]. Industrial fertilizers lead to similar nutrients leaching than the present study with 19%–41% of N leached according to the soil origin, with lower leaching observed in silt soil. For all the digestates investigated the nutrient leaching ranged from 17% to 52% which is in agreement with the present results [33]. Nonetheless, such results have to be considered as preliminary assay and should be repeated in pilot lysimeter simulating simultaneous plant growth or just after the harvest period as the N dynamic and loses will not be the same. Furthermore, nutrient leaching potential following application of fertilizers depends on several others factors such as fertilization strategies (e.g., time and methods of application), soil texture (e.g., sand, silt, loam soils), topography, precipitations and cropping systems [9].

4. Conclusions

In this study, it was demonstrated that microalgae can efficiently remove the nutrients from digestate once the best dilution factor applied. Outdoors photo-bioreactors reached 100% of NH4+ removal and an average of 64.77% for PO4−3 removal. In addition, the microalgal biomass produced (38.3 mgTSS L−1 d−1) has proved to enhance tomato plants growth by 32% (plant dry biomass) with 32% more leaves and 12% higher content in chlorophyll a, compared to control tests (without fertilizers). The leaching behavior was also improved by the addition of microalgae biomass, finding a notable different with the leaching effect in case of synthetic fertilizer. After 25 days, only 7% of total N was leached when adding microalgae biomass to soil, versus 50% leached when synthetic fertilizer was used.

Supplementary Materials

The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/11/3890/s1, Figure S1: Cultivation of Monoraphidium sp. in batch at different concentrations, from left to right 1:20, 1:30, 1:50 respectively; Figure S2: Cultivation of Monoraphidium sp. in photobioreactors of 110 dm3 in batch/semi-continuous regimes with digestate diluted at 1:50.

Author Contributions

R.J.: Investigation, methodology, data curation, writing-review; G.M.: writing—review and editing; A.B.: writing—review and editing; C.C.: Investigation, methodology, conceptualization, data curation; S.T.: methodology, data curation; F.M.: conceptualization, data curation, writing-review and editing, project administration, supervision. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by Nouvelle Aquitaine region (FRANCE), grant number 19R04.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to the Nouvelle Aquitaine region for its financial support through the FEDER program, which allow us to perform this assay.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.

Abbreviations

The following abbreviations are used in this manuscript:
ADAnaerobic digestion
CaCarotenoids
Ch.aChlorophyll a
Ch.bChlorophyll b
CHPCogeneration Heat and Power system
OFMSWOrganic Fraction of Municipal Solid Wastes
TSTotal Solids
TSSTotal Solids Suspended
VSVolatile Solids

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Figure 1. Scheme of experimental set up for microalgae production in semi-continuous mode in outdoor conditions in the vertical closed photobioreactors.
Figure 1. Scheme of experimental set up for microalgae production in semi-continuous mode in outdoor conditions in the vertical closed photobioreactors.
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Figure 2. (a) Growth curves and (b) NH4+, (c) NO3 and (d) PO43− consumption for Monoraphidium sp. cultivated in digestate diluted at 1:20 (L 20), 1:30 (L30) and 1:50 (L 50).
Figure 2. (a) Growth curves and (b) NH4+, (c) NO3 and (d) PO43− consumption for Monoraphidium sp. cultivated in digestate diluted at 1:20 (L 20), 1:30 (L30) and 1:50 (L 50).
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Figure 3. (a) Weather condition and temperature data graphs during the running period of the photobioreactor, (b) Monoraphidium sp. growth curves in liquid digestate diluted at 1:50, expressed in absorbance at 680 nm and number of cells per µL, (c) NH4+ and NO3 consumption expressed in mg L−1, (d) pH and PO43− consumption expressed in mg L−1. Results are presented for photo-bioreactors for the three batches (B1, B2, B3) and semi-continuous trials.
Figure 3. (a) Weather condition and temperature data graphs during the running period of the photobioreactor, (b) Monoraphidium sp. growth curves in liquid digestate diluted at 1:50, expressed in absorbance at 680 nm and number of cells per µL, (c) NH4+ and NO3 consumption expressed in mg L−1, (d) pH and PO43− consumption expressed in mg L−1. Results are presented for photo-bioreactors for the three batches (B1, B2, B3) and semi-continuous trials.
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Figure 4. (a) Germination Index (GI) and dried biomass, (b) leaves numbers and (c) chlorophyll and carotenoids contains obtained in tomato plant grown with the following conditions: S (soil alone, control), SE (soil + synthetic fertilizer), SD (soil + liquid digestate) and SM (soil + microalgal biomass).
Figure 4. (a) Germination Index (GI) and dried biomass, (b) leaves numbers and (c) chlorophyll and carotenoids contains obtained in tomato plant grown with the following conditions: S (soil alone, control), SE (soil + synthetic fertilizer), SD (soil + liquid digestate) and SM (soil + microalgal biomass).
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Figure 5. Cumulative leached amount of NH4+-N, NO3-N, NO2-N (kg N/ha) in soil treated with synthetic fertilizer (SE), liquid digestate (SD) and microalgae biomass (SM). For each condition, the lixiviation due to the control (soil alone) have been subtracted.
Figure 5. Cumulative leached amount of NH4+-N, NO3-N, NO2-N (kg N/ha) in soil treated with synthetic fertilizer (SE), liquid digestate (SD) and microalgae biomass (SM). For each condition, the lixiviation due to the control (soil alone) have been subtracted.
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Table 1. Selected chemical properties of the liquid digestate used in this study.
Table 1. Selected chemical properties of the liquid digestate used in this study.
ParametersValuesUnits
pH (25 °C)8.6
Conductivity3640µS cm−1
TS2.0% raw matter
VS470g/kg TS
COD239g/kg TS
NTK216brut g N/kg TS
NH4+121g N/kg TS
P16.1g P2O5/kg TS
K252g K2O/kg TS
Mg7.1g MgO/kg TS
Ca33.8g CaO/kg TS
S17.2g SO3/kg TS
As2.1mg As/kg TS
Cd0.36mg Cd/kg TS
Cr5.5mg Cr/kg TS
Cu79.5mg Cu/kg TS
Ni10.0mg Ni/kg TS
Zn207mg Zn/kg TS
Table 2. Main microalgae performances parameters and nutrients removal efficiency (%) for the culture lead in batch in indoor condition at various dilution rate of 1:20; 1:30; 1:50 and outdoor condition (B1, B2 and B3) at a dilution rate of 1:50. B1, B2 and B3 represent the three successive batches lead in outdoor condition prior to the semi-continuous assay.
Table 2. Main microalgae performances parameters and nutrients removal efficiency (%) for the culture lead in batch in indoor condition at various dilution rate of 1:20; 1:30; 1:50 and outdoor condition (B1, B2 and B3) at a dilution rate of 1:50. B1, B2 and B3 represent the three successive batches lead in outdoor condition prior to the semi-continuous assay.
IndoorOutdoor
L 20L 30L 50B1B2B3
Specific growth, µ (d−1)0.030.050.130.250.140.21
Biomass productivity (mg TSS L−1 d−1)---43.331.739.8
Cells max (*107 cell/mL)0.742.23.61.71.31.6
Biomass yield (g TSS. L−1)---0.770.570.68
NH4+ (%removal capacity)3466100100100100
P-PO4−3 (%removal capacity)0779278.546.675.6
Table 3. Main chemical properties of the microalgae cultivated and harvested in this study.
Table 3. Main chemical properties of the microalgae cultivated and harvested in this study.
ParametersValues (± S.D)
C (% TS)30.62 ± 0.22
H (% TS)4.04 ± 0.03
N (% TS)3.27 ± 0.26
S (% TS)0.85 ± 0.02
K(% TS)0.55 ± 0.02
P(% TS)0.90 ± 0.2
Ca (% TS)0.45 ± 0.02
Mg(% TS)0.25 ± 0.08
Table 4. Elemental composition of tomato plants cultivated in the following conditions: with no fertilizer (S), synthetic fertilizer (SE), liquid digestate (SD) and microalgal biomass (SM). Given values (±S.D).
Table 4. Elemental composition of tomato plants cultivated in the following conditions: with no fertilizer (S), synthetic fertilizer (SE), liquid digestate (SD) and microalgal biomass (SM). Given values (±S.D).
C (% TS)H (% TS)N (% TS)S (% TS)
S38.60 ± 0.125.94 ± 0.060.95 ± 0.030.26 ± 0.01
SE38.13 ± 0.145.88 ± 0.011.54 ± 0.030.21 ± 0.00
SD37.76 ± 0.035.87 ± 0.031.45 ± 0.030.28 ± 0.01
SM38.14 ± 0.145.88 ± 0.061.04 ± 0.010.33 ± 0.02
Table 5. Literature review of microalgae biomass used as fertilizers for plants growth.
Table 5. Literature review of microalgae biomass used as fertilizers for plants growth.
Medium Growth and Pilots UsedMicroalgae SpeciesCrop TypeFertilizer ApplicationCultivation ConditionsEnhanced Effect of Microalgae Biomass Treatment Compared to ControlsRef.
Grow RateLeaf Number or Size
Wastewater from aquaculture system. Microalgae cultivated in outdoor raceway pond (28 m2).Commercial Microalgal Bacterial flocsTomato Solanum lycopersicum cv.(i) liquid inorganic fertilizer,Cultivation in greenhouses: 22 °C-13 h light, 17 °C-11 h dark. Luminosity: 50 µmol m−2 s−1. Cultivated in labs (1.0 × 0.2 × 0.085 m) with an interspacing of 50 cm between plants.(i) 3.76 g TS
(ii) 3.76 g TS
(iii) 4.01 g TS
(iv) 3.83 g TS
(i) 40.7 cm
(ii) 40.6 cm
(iii) 37.8 cm
(iv) 42.2 cm
[26]
(ii) solid organic fertilizer,
(iii) MaB-floc fertilizer,
Modified Guillard’s f/2 marine medium. Microalgae cultivated in outdoor closed flat panel photobioreactors (25 m2)Nannochloropsis oculata
(iv) Nannochloropsis fertilizer.
Digestate dairy manure as medium culture. Algal biomass was produced from laboratory-scale algal turf scrubbers (ATS)Algal biomassCucumber (Cucumis satious)(i) 2.8 g dry alga/pot,Cultivation in pots located in a growth chamber. Conditions: 25 °C 16 h light, 20 °C 8 h dark, 20-days growth, 600 µmol m−2 s−1.(i) 2.98 gTS/pot;
(ii) 4.35 gTS/pot;
(iii) 4.16 gTS/pot;
(iv) 3.18 gTS/pot;
(v) 4.55 gTS/pot;
(vi) 0.99 gTS/pot;
-[43]
(ii) 5.5 g dry alga/pot,
(iii) 11 g dry alga per pot,
(iv) 1.25 g indust. fertilizer/pot,
(v) 2.5 g industrial fertilizer/pot,
(vi) no fertilization.
Corn (Zea mays)(i) 10 g dry alga/pot,(i) 6.8 gTS/pot;
(ii) 10.7 gTS/pot;
(iii) 7.7 gTS/pot;
(iv) 8.6 gTS/pot;
(v) 0.53 gTS/pot;
(ii) 20 g dry alga/pot,
(iii) 5.5 g indust. fertilizer/ pot,
(iv) 11 g indust. fertilizer/pot,
(v) no fertilization.
The algal cells were grown at a temperature of 25 ± 1 °C and surface light of about 2500 lux.Chlorella vulgarisLettuce (lactuca sativa cv.)(i) no fertilization,Cultivated in pot in greenhouse under a 16 h photoperiod at 20–25 °C for 30 days.(i) 3.2 gTS/plant;
(ii) 5.5 gTS/plant;
(iii) 6.5 gTS/plant;
(iv) 8.3 gTS/plant;
(v) 9.8 gTS/plant;
-[24]
(ii) 1/2 g/kg of soil of dry algae,
(iii) 1 g/kg of soil of dry algae,
(iv) 2 g/kg of soil of dry algae,
(v) 3 g/kg of soil of dry algae.
Fish wastewater. Batch cultivation (2 L) of the microalgae was performed using the obtained fish water in glass bottles and air-aerated with a flow rate of 10–15 mL/min at 28–30 °C.S. platensis (LB 1928)Arugula (Erucasativa)(i) no fertilization, Each pot consists of 500 g of soil. Conditions: 13.5 µmol m−2 s−1 during 21–40 days.(i) 4.28 gTS;
(ii) 10.95 gTS;
(iii) 21.16 gTS;
(iv) 22.74 gTS;
(i) 9.3 leaves
(ii) 11 leaves
(iii) 12.3 leaves
(iv) 13.3 leaves
[27]
(ii) Spirulina (5 g/pot),
Bayam Red (Ameranthus gangeticus),(iii) chemical fertilizer,(i) 7.48 gTS;
(ii) 9.06 gTS;
(iii) 9.52 gTS;
(iv) 10 gTS;
(i) 7.6 leaves
(ii) 9 leaves
(iii) 9.7 leaves
(iv) 9.7 leaves
(iv) Spirulina (5 g/pot) plus chemical fertilizer.
BG 11 medium. Cultivated in 1 L conical flasks by continuous air bubbling under continuous illumination 3500 lux for 7 daysChlorella oocystoidesZea mays(i) Without algae (Control 0%),Black plastic pots (15 cm in diameter and 20 cm height).(i) 0.98 gTS/plant
(ii) 1.03 gTS/plant
(iii) 1.33 gTS/plant
(iv) 1.5 gTS/plant
(v) 1.49 gTS/plant
(i) 6 leaves
(ii) 6.1 leaves
(iii) 6.5 leaves
(iv) 6.7 leaves
(v) 6.5 leaves
[47]
(ii) 0.1% of algae,
(iii) 1% of algae,
(iv) 2.5% of algae,
(v) 5% of algae.
Industrial wastewater from meat processing industry. Microalgae cultivated in a high-rate algal pond (HRAP)Consortium of algal biomassMillet crop, Pennisetum glaucum, (BRS 1501 cultivar)(i) no fertilization,Outdoors Brazil; plot of 4 m2. Duration: 60 days.(i) 2933 kgTS ha−1
(ii) 4523 kgTS ha−1
(iii) 4979 kgTS ha−1
4–30%. No significant difference with industrial fertilizers[25]
(ii) 120 kg ha−1 of N provided by the algal biomass,
(iii) 120 kg ha−1 of N provided by conventional urea.
BG11 algae culture medium. Microalgae cultivated outdoors in seven 1.22 m × 14.63 m production row panel photobioreactorsAcutodesmus dimorphus (LARB-0414)Roma tomato (S. lycopersicum var. Roma) seeds(i) control (no fertilizers),28 °C, 85% humidity, greenhouse, 14 days growth. The seedlings were grown into 28-cm pots for 8 weeks.(i) 47 g (weight of shoot and root)
(ii) 153 g (B1)
(iii) 70.5 g (B2)
53% with 50 g of biofertilizer
88% with 100 g of biofertilizer
[46]
(ii) 50 g of biofertilizer applied at the time of transplant (B1),
(iii) 100 g of biofertilizer applied at the time of transplant (B2).
(i) control (no fertilizers),(i) 47 g (weight of shoot and root)
(ii) 547 g (B1)
(iii) 564 g (B2)
123% with 50 g of biofertilizer
192% with 100 g of biofertilizer
(ii) 50 g of biofertilizer applied 22 days prior to transplant (B1),
(iii) 100 g of biofertilizer applied 22 days prior to transplant (B2).
Agricultural liquid digestate diluted at 1:50. Microalgae cultivated in outdoor condition in 110 L photobioreactorsMonoraphidium sp. tomatoes (Solanum Lycopersicum)(i) no fertilizers,
(ii) industrial fertilizers 170 kgN/ha,
(iii) liquid digestate 170 kg N/ha,
(iv) microalgae at 70 kg N/ha.
Cultivation in 0.5 L pot in growth chamber. During the trial, the environmental conditions were the following ones: day duration 16 h at 25 °C under 4600 lux (62.1 µmol m2 s−1), in 60 % relative humidity, whereas night conditions were 8 h darkness at 18 °C in 80% relative humidity.(i) 19.4 gTS/100 plants
(ii) 24.8 gTS/100 plants
(iii) 25.2 gTS/100 plants
(iv) 25.7 gTS/100 plants
(i) 20.8 leaves/ plant
(ii) 30 leaves/ plant
(iii) 29.6 leaves/ plant
(iv) 27.4 leaves/ plant
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Jimenez, R.; Markou, G.; Tayibi, S.; Barakat, A.; Chapsal, C.; Monlau, F. Production of Microalgal Slow-Release Fertilizer by Valorizing Liquid Agricultural Digestate: Growth Experiments with Tomatoes. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 3890. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10113890

AMA Style

Jimenez R, Markou G, Tayibi S, Barakat A, Chapsal C, Monlau F. Production of Microalgal Slow-Release Fertilizer by Valorizing Liquid Agricultural Digestate: Growth Experiments with Tomatoes. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(11):3890. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10113890

Chicago/Turabian Style

Jimenez, Raquel, Giorgos Markou, Saida Tayibi, Abdellatif Barakat, Camille Chapsal, and Florian Monlau. 2020. "Production of Microalgal Slow-Release Fertilizer by Valorizing Liquid Agricultural Digestate: Growth Experiments with Tomatoes" Applied Sciences 10, no. 11: 3890. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10113890

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