Biology Project
Biology Project
Biology Project
Certificate
Acknowledgement
Introduction
Microbes in Household products
Food products
Industrial product
Microbes in sewage treatment
Microbes in Biogas production
Microbes in Biocontrol agents
Microbes in Biofertilisers
Conclusion
Bibliography
Introduction :
1.Beverages
2.Antibiotics
3.Organic Acids
4.Enzymes
5.Bio-Active molecules
6.Vitamins
1.Beverages
When juices and malted cereals are fermented
they get converted to ethanol.
Brewer's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) is
commonly used for fermentation.
Drinks with versatile colour and flavour are
produced depending upon the raw material and
nature of processing Used.
Classification of beverages
1. Whisky, Rum and Brandy are distilled
beverages.
2. Wine and beer are not distilled
3.Antibiotic Production:
Antibiotics are chemical substances, which are
produced by some microbes and can kill or
retard the growth of other (disease-causing)
microbes.
Penicillin produced by Alexander Fleming from
Penicillium notatum while working with
staphylococci ---- Earnest chain and Howard
Plorey awarded Nobel Prize in 1945 for
establishing Penicillin as an effective antibiotic.
Penicillin produced by Alexander Fleming from
Penicillium notatum while working with
staphylococci ---- Earnest chain and Howard
Plorey awarded Nobel Prize in 1945 for
establishing Penicillin as an effective antibiotic.
3.Organic Acids:
Various organic acids are obtained by fermentation
using various microbes as given below
4.Enzyme Production:
i. Lipase ( produced by Candida lipolytica )
ii. Pectinases
iii. Proteases
iv. Streptokinase
5.Bioactive Molecule:
a) Cyclosporin A
b)Statins
6.Vitamin Production:
Vitamins are organic compounds that perform
specific biological functions for normal maintenance
and optimal growth of an organism. These vitamins
cannot be synthesized by the higher organisms,
including man, and therefore they have to be
supplied in small amounts in the diet.
i. Primary treatment:
Physical Removal of Particles - large and small
- from the sewage through filtration and
sedimentation.
Stages -- floating debris is removed by
sequential filtration.
Then the grit (soil and small pebbles) are
removed by sedimentation.
All solids that settle form the primary sludge,
and the supernatant forms the effluent.
The effluent from the primary settling tank is
taken for secondary treatment.
Biogas Production:
Biogas is a mixture of gases (containing
predominantly methane) produced by the
microbial activity and which may be used as
fuel.
The biogas plant consists of a concrete tank (10-
15 feet deep) in which bio-wastes are collected
and a slurry of dung is fed.
The biogas plant has an outlet, which is
connected to a pipe to supply biogas to nearby
houses.
Bacillus Thuringiensis:
Bacteria Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is
used to get rid of butterfly caterpillars where dried
spores of Bacillus thuringiensis are mixed with
water and sprayed onto vulnerable plants such as
brassicas and fruit trees and these are eaten by the
insect larvae and in the gut of the larvae, the toxin
is released and the larvae get killed.
Microbes As Biofertilisers:
Biofertilizers are living organisms that improve
the supplement nature of the soil.
Important biofertilizers include fungi, bacteria,
and cyanobacteria.
Rhizobium frame root knobs in leguminous
plants and fixes nitrogen present in the air
Azospirilium and Azotobacter are free-living
bacteria that fix nitrogen present in the
atmosphere and in this way expanding nitrogen
content of soil.
Mycorrhiza: fungi that are symbiotically
connected with the roots of the plants.
Conclusion:
Microbes are a very important
component of life on earth. Not all microbes are
pathogenic. Many microbes are very useful to
human beings. We use microbes and
microbially derived products almost every day.
Microbes are essential in processes like Wine
making and Cheese making. Bacteria called
lactic acid bacteria (LAB) grow in milk to convert
it into curd. The dough, which is used to make
bread, is fermented by yeast called
Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Certain dishes such
as idli and dosa, are made from dough
fermented by microbes. Bacteria and fungi are
used to impart particular texture, taste and
flavour to cheese.