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Pilot study of the influence of thermoplastic starch based polymer packaging material on the growth of diatom population in sea water environment Cover

Pilot study of the influence of thermoplastic starch based polymer packaging material on the growth of diatom population in sea water environment

Open Access
|Jun 2011

Abstract

Novel polymeric packaging materials susceptible to environmentally friendly decomposition appeared on the global market. The paper is devoted to an investigation of the impact of degradable polymer packaging on marine life. The chosen polymer was a commercial packaging based on thermoplastic starch (TPS over 85%). The microorganism chosen was Phaeodactylum tricornutum diatom (identified in many aquatic reservoirs, with a tendency to flow with seawater plankton in places of great saline oscillation). The packaging material was incubated both in natural seawater and in the presence of diatom population. The chlorophyll a content was determined as the criterion of diatom growth in the presence of tested polymers. The polymer surface and the colour changes in the diatom culture were recorded photographically. The presence of polymeric samples significantly changed the kinetic of diatom growth in seawater during incubation affecting its biological balance. During the experiment in seawater, diatom adhered to polymer surfaces and the polymer stimulated their growth.

Language: English
Page range: 57 - 61
Published on: Jun 16, 2011
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2011 Agnieszka Guzman, Helena Janik, Marta Mastalerz, Alicja Kosakowska, published by West Pomeranian University of Technology, Szczecin
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.

Volume 13 (2011): Issue 2 (June 2011)