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|a Parasites in algae mass culture.
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|a Washington, D.C. :
|b United States. Department of Energy. Office of Science ;
|a Oak Ridge, Tenn. :
|b Distributed by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Department of Energy,
|c 2014.
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|a Size: Article No. 278 :
|b digital, PDF file.
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|a text
|b txt
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|a Published through Scitech Connect.
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|a 06/06/2014.
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|a "Journal ID: ISSN 1664-302X."
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|a Carney, Laura T. ; Lane, Todd W. ;
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|a Parasites are now known to be ubiquitous across biological systems and can play an important role in modulating algal populations. However, there is a lack of extensive information on their role in artificial ecosystems such as algal production ponds and photobioreactors. Parasites have been implicated in the demise of algal blooms. Because individual mass culture systems often tend to be unialgal and a select few algal species are in wide scale application, there is an increased potential for parasites to have a devastating effect on commercial scale monoculture. As commercial algal production continues to expand with a widening variety of applications, including biofuel, food and pharmaceuticals, the parasites associated with algae will become of greater interest and potential economic impact. A number of important algal parasites have been identified in algal mass culture systems in the last few years and this number is sure to grow as the number of commercial algae ventures increases. Here, we review the research that has identified and characterized parasites infecting mass cultivated algae, the techniques being proposed and or developed to control them, and the potential impact of parasites on the future of the algal biomass industry.
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|b AC04-94AL85000.
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|a 59 basic biological sciences
|2 local.
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|a Microbiology
|2 local.
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|a Algae mass culture
|2 local.
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|a Algae parasites
|2 local.
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|a Parasite detection
|2 local.
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|a Contamination control
|2 local.
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|a Algal biofuels
|2 local.
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|a Sandia National Laboratories..
|4 res.
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|a United States. Department of Energy. Office of Science.
|4 spn.
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|a United States.
|b Department of Energy.
|b Office of Scientific and Technical Information
|4 dst.
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|u https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1628109
|z Full Text (via OSTI)
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|b 04-01-21
|c 04-01-21
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