Hawaiian Mineral Deposits And Extremophiles On Loihi Submarine Volcano: A New Resource

International Marine Minerals Society
Alexander Malahoff
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
4
File Size:
77 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

The most exciting frontier in Ocean Technology is represented by a new class of Marine Bioproducts, the source of which lies in marine microorganisms. The microorganisms include microalgae, bacteria and archaea. These organisms represent very diverse, adaptive life forms and in their metabolic processes use carotenoids, polyunsaturated fatty acids, ultraviolet blockers, as well as a wide range of enzymes that are pivotal in the production of new pharmaceuticals and nutraceutical products. These organisms cover a wide spectrum of ocean environments, from the shallow to the deep, from the normal to the extreme. The technological challenge is in the identification of candidate organisms, in the screening for valuable enzymes, and in the industrial production. A whole new range of collecting strategies involving submersibles, ROVs and in situ ocean floor instrumentation is emerging. New non-polluting industrial chemical processes involving the use of photobioreactors and extremophile bioreactors for breeding and monitoring these organisms in neo-farming technology is emerging. The commercial value of these candidate products is immense, as is the range of potential organisms. The dimension of this new industry is global. The Marine Bioproducts Engineering Center (MarBEC), funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), has been established at the University of Hawaii. The vision of MarBEC is to develop a seamless research system stretching from undergraduate education to industry for the purposes of producing valuable marine bioproducts outside of the normal chemical factory production. MarBEC is uniquely and strategically placed in the Pacific to explore, find, and adapt highly bioactive marine micro-organisms found in the tropical ocean. We have watched the increasing need by the ever-
Citation

APA: Alexander Malahoff  (2000)  Hawaiian Mineral Deposits And Extremophiles On Loihi Submarine Volcano: A New Resource

MLA: Alexander Malahoff Hawaiian Mineral Deposits And Extremophiles On Loihi Submarine Volcano: A New Resource. International Marine Minerals Society, 2000.

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