The "bright Side" of Cyanobacteria: Revising the Nuisance Potential and Prospecting Innovative Biotechnology-Based Solutions to Integrate Water Management Programs
                 
        Academic Article in Scopus 
                     
         
            
    
    
     
        
    
          
      
    
      
            Overview 
              
            Identity 
              
            Additional document info 
              
    View All 
      
 
        
        
            
                 
         
            Overview 
        
            
                    abstract    
                
    
    	© 2021 American Chemical Society.Global warming and the anthropogenic degradation of water quality are pointed out as main causes of the worldwide increase in frequency, severity, and duration of harmful algal blooms (HABs). Cyanobacteria, major constituents of HABs, can cause ecological, economic, and human health problems, configuring a "dark side"requiring management attention. Their growth can be potentiated by climate change consequences, highlighting further the urgency of improving HABs management strategies to ensure water quality. An innovative perspective for cyanobacteria management is the exploitation of their "bright side". Several exploitable products produced by cyanobacteria (e.g., bioactive pigments, lipids, proteins) present high market value. Thus, this work provides a critical perspective on how HABs management may be connected with biotechnology in the future. We propose the use of the biomass of cyanobacteria blooms physically removed in traditional control actions (much needed to ensure environmental and even human health safety) as a feedstock for future valorization, thus allying profit to water quality management, in a win-win relationship between economics and environmental sustainability. Such a proposal was validated with an economic analysis, which evidenced a relevant potential for a positive return (hence rendering profit likely to occur), both considering only the delivery of harvested biomass to production units and the full valuation route from harvesting to the selling of the extracted/purified product using phycocyanin as a model. 
     
                 
              
            
                    
                
              
            
                    status    
                
              
            
                    publication date    
                
              
            
                    published in    
                
              
         
          
        
        
            
                 
         
            Identity 
        
            
                    Digital Object Identifier (DOI)    
                
              
         
          
        
        
            
                 
         
            Additional document info 
        
            
                    has global citation frequency    
                
              
            
                    start page    
                
              
            
                    end page    
                
              
            
                    volume