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Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
Meat-processing wastewater (MPWW) is rich in nutrients and organic matter. This study assessed its potential as feedstock for microalgal biomass production while enabling wastewater treatment. In batch assays, the microalgae-based consortium grew in raw MPWW, and its synergy with the native wastewater microbial community enhanced the chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal rate. If suspended solids were pre-removed from wastewater, COD removing rates improved from 828.5 ± 60.5 to 1097.5 ± 22.2 mg L?1 d?1. In a raceway system operated in fed-batch mode with sieved and sedimented MPWW, COD removal was consistently achieved across feeding cycles, despite the variability in wastewater composition, reaching rates of up to 806.3 ± 0.0 mg L?1 d?1. Total nitrogen also decreased in most cycles. Microalgal biomass, estimated from total photosynthetic pigment’s concentration, increased from 0.4 to 17.9 µg mL?1. The microalgae-based consortium became more diverse over time, harboring at the end, additional eukaryotic taxa such as protozoan grazers and fungi (e.g., Heterolobosea class and Trichosporonaceae and Dipodascaceae families), although their roles in removal processes remain unknown. This study highlights the potential use of real MPWW as feedstock for microalgal-based biomass production with concomitant carbon/nutrient load reduction, aligning its implementation with circular economy percepts.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
Biomass production Bioremediation Circular economy Meat processing wastewater Microalgae-based consortium Microbiome
Contexto Educativo
Citação
Sousa, A. S. S., Oliveira, A. S., Castro, P. M. L., & Amorim, C. L. (2026). Integrated treatment and valorization of meat processing wastewater via microalgae-based biomass production. Clean Technologies, 8(1), Article 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/cleantechnol8010020
