Volume 14, Number 5, 385-390, DOI: 10.1023/A:1022199332224

A procedure for axenic isolation of the marine microalga Isochrysis galbana from heavily contaminated mass cultures

Ji-Young Cho, Jae-Suk Choi, In-Soo Kong, Soo-Il Park, Russell G. Kerr and Yong-Ki Hong

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Abstract

Isochrysis galbana, one of the most widely usedmarine microalgae in the rearing of finfish and shellfish larvae, is masscultured frequently in outdoor tanks. Under prolonged and repeated culture,severe contamination occurs. Axenic isolation of I.galbanafrom such cultures was best achieved by using a ternary procedure involvingpercoll-gradient centrifugation, treatment with antibiotics, and growth on agarmedium. Protozoa and other algae were removed most effectively by isolation ofI. galbana at the 30–40% density layer on apercoll-gradient. Removal of bacteria was accomplished using a mixture of 5antibiotics (250 mgrg mL–1 ampicillin, 50mgrg mL–1 gentamycin, 100 mgrgmL–1 kanamycin, 500 mgrgmL–1 neomycin, 50 mgrgmL–1 streptomycin). Axenic colonies were isolated fromasolid medium prepared from 1% purified agar. The ternary procedure isconsideredapplicable to the isolation of other axenic single-celled microalgae fromheavily contaminated cultures.

Antibiotics - Axenic isolation - Gelling agent -  Isochrysis galbana  - Microalgae - Percoll

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