Revision [29005]

This is an old revision of Spirulina made by OpenMindSpace on 2014-04-30 14:57:32.

 

Spirulina


Spirulina is a form of cyanobacterium, often eaten as a protein rich dietary supplement, which consists primarily of two species of cyanobacterium: Arthrospira platensis and Arthrospira maxima. This supplement is often distributed as a tablet or powder and can be grown in a highly alkaline environment (PH 8.5+).

Dried Spirulina is an extremely dense form of protein and nutrients, containing about 57g of protein per 100g of powder. It is a complete protein with all essential amino acids. It also contains other nutrients such as:

Adding Spirulina to Your Diet


Its relatively easy to add Spirulina to your diet. Dr. Mercola, for instance, suggests adding 1 tbsp of Spirulina to a meal as a protein supplement.

Growing Spirulina


Nutrients to Feed Spirulina


Spirulina is able to produce its own food, without a living energy or organic carbon source. A simple formula which could grow spirulina includes:

Baking soda - NaHCO3 - 16 g/L = 60.56 g/gal
Potassium nitrate - KNO3 - 2 g/L = 7.57 g/gal
Sea salt - NaCl - 1 g/L = 3.78 g/gal
Potassium phosphate - KH 2 PO 4 - 0.1 g/L = .378 g/gal
Iron sulphate - FeSO4 * 7H2O - 0.01 g/L = .0378 g/gal
Valid XHTML :: Valid CSS: :: Powered by WikkaWiki