The influence of microamounts of organic substances other than vitamins on the growth of some red algae in axenic culture

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Abstract

Several red algae in axenic culture decline in artificial seawater after a period of cultivation. Nemaliort helminthoides rapidly loses its brown-red colour and grows with longer and thinner threads. Extracts of contaminated red algae, or nutrient medium in which they have grown, as well as fresh seawater from the Fucus-Ascophyllum zone, enhance growth and restore the pigmentation of the cells. Addition of 40 mg Bacto-Casamino acids per litre of nutrient medium had the same effect. After fractional precipitation with ethyl alcohol and separation on a Sephadex column the activity was localised to a peptide fraction. Results from chromatography point to effects from a low molecular weight substance active alone or coupled to a peptide. © 1970 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Fries, L. (1970). The influence of microamounts of organic substances other than vitamins on the growth of some red algae in axenic culture. British Phycological Journal, 5(1), 39–46. https://doi.org/10.1080/00071617000650051

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