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Organic Spirulina Powder: Technical Specifications, Production Methods, and Quality Parameters

What This Guide Covers

This technical guide is written for food technologists, nutraceutical formulators, quality assurance specialists, and ingredient procurement professionals who work with organic spirulina powder. It details species classification, cultivation technologies, post-harvest processing, full nutritional composition data, quality specification parameters, application matrix across food and supplement categories, and benchmark comparisons with chlorella and other microalgae. If you are interested in health benefits for consumers, see our Spirulina Health Benefits Guide. For market data and procurement strategy, refer to our Spirulina B2B Procurement Guide.


Species Classification and Taxonomy

Spirulina sold commercially as a food ingredient belongs to the genus Arthrospira, a filamentous cyanobacterium — not a true alga despite the common nomenclature. The two primary commercial species are:

ParameterArthrospira platensisArthrospira maxima
Geographic OriginAfrica (Lake Chad, alkaline lakes)Central America (Lake Texcoco, Mexico)
Filament Length200–500 μm300–700 μm
Trichome Width6–10 μm7–12 μm
Helix Pitch30–60 μm40–80 μm
Optimal pH9.5–10.59.0–10.0
Optimal Temperature30–35°C32–38°C
Protein Content (dry)60–70%55–65%
Phycocyanin Content12–18%8–14%
Commercial Dominance~85% of global production~10% of global production

A. platensis dominates global organic spirulina production due to its higher protein and phycocyanin yields, broader pH tolerance, and well-established cultivation protocols. A. maxima is primarily cultivated in Mexico and select California operations, valued for its distinct flavor profile in gourmet applications.

The taxonomy has been revised multiple times, which causes occasional confusion in older literature and supplier documentation. The current consensus (NCBI Taxonomy, 2024) recognizes Arthrospira platensis and Arthrospira maxima as distinct species within the Oscillatoriaceae family, phylum Cyanobacteria. Forms labeled “Spirulina” in older trade documents from the 1970s–1990s refer to these same organisms.


Cultivation Systems

Open Raceway Pond (ORP) — 85% of Global Organic Production

The dominant production method for organic spirulina. Ponds are shallow (20–30 cm depth) concrete or HDPE-lined channels configured in oval raceway loops with paddle wheel circulation.

ParameterTypical Range
Pond Depth20–30 cm
Paddle Wheel Speed15–25 rpm
Flow Velocity0.15–0.30 m/s
Culture Density0.4–0.8 g/L (DW)
Harvest IntervalContinuous, every 2–4 hours during daylight
Areal Productivity10–20 g/m²/day
Annual Productivity30–50 tonnes/ha/year (dry)
Water SourceGroundwater or filtered surface water, alkalized to pH 9.5–10.5
Culture MediumSodium bicarbonate (16.8 g/L), sodium nitrate (2.5 g/L), potassium phosphate (0.5 g/L), trace minerals

Organic certification requirements for ORP:

  • No synthetic pesticides or herbicides in water source management
  • No synthetic nitrogen sources (sodium nitrate must be mined, not synthesized; some certifiers allow Chilean nitrate)
  • No GMO starter cultures
  • Buffer zones between organic and conventional ponds (minimum 8 m under EU organic regulation EC 834/2007)
  • Full traceability of all medium inputs, including mined minerals

The high alkalinity (pH 9.5–10.5) of spirulina culture provides natural contamination control — few competing organisms survive at these pH levels, which is a significant advantage over neutral-pH microalgae cultivation.

Closed Photobioreactor (PBR) — 12% of Global Production

Tubular or flat-plate PBRs offer superior contamination control and higher biomass density, at the cost of increased capital and operational expenditure.

ParameterPBR (Tubular)PBR (Flat-Plate)
Culture Density1.5–4.0 g/L2.0–5.0 g/L
Areal Productivity25–35 g/m²/day30–40 g/m²/day
Tube Diameter30–60 mmN/A
Panel ThicknessN/A10–50 mm
Light Path30–60 mm10–30 mm
Capital Cost$150–300/m²$200–400/m²
Energy Input180–350 W/m³200–400 W/m³

Closed PBR systems are increasingly used for pharmaceutical-grade and organic-certified spirulina destined for high-purity phycocyanin extraction, where contamination control is critical. Several European organic spirulina producers operate hybrid systems — initial culture propagation in PBRs followed by scale-up in ORPs.

Fermentation (Heterotrophic) — 3% of Global Production

A minority production method using glucose or acetate as carbon sources in sealed stainless steel fermenters, without photosynthesis. This method is primarily used for non-organic spirulina destined for animal feed or biofuel applications. It is not permitted under major organic certification standards because it relies on synthetic carbon substrates.


Harvesting and Post-Harvest Processing

Primary Harvest: Filtration and Concentration

Continuous harvest is performed using vibrating screens or micro-strainers with mesh apertures of 25–50 μm, sized to retain spirulina filaments while allowing culture medium to pass through for recycling.

StepEquipmentParameters
Primary FiltrationVibrating screen (25–50 μm mesh)Harvests filaments at 3–5% solids; 90–95% water removed
WashingCounter-current washerFresh water rinse to remove residual medium salts
ConcentrationContinuous centrifuge or vacuum filterConcentrates biomass to 15–25% solids
HomogenizationHigh-shear mixerBreaks filament clumps for uniform drying

Drying Technologies

Drying is the most quality-critical post-harvest step. Temperature, duration, and oxygen exposure directly affect phycocyanin retention, microbial load, and final product color.

MethodTemperatureDrying TimePhycocyanin RetentionCapital CostComments
Spray DryingInlet: 160–200°C; Outlet: 70–90°CSeconds60–75%HighIndustry standard; produces fine powder (50–150 μm); some thermal degradation of phycocyanin
Freeze Drying (Lyophilization)-40 to -50°C shelf; 20°C condenser24–48 hours90–98%Very HighMaximum phycocyanin retention; premium “raw” spirulina; 3–5× cost vs spray-dried
Drum Drying120–140°C surface10–30 seconds30–50%MediumSignificant phycocyanin loss; darker color; used only for feed-grade product
Solar Drying35–55°C (ambient)8–24 hours65–80%LowUsed by smallholder farms in tropical regions; risk of microbial contamination if humidity control is inadequate

Spray drying is the default for organic spirulina powder used in food and supplement applications. The short residence time (milliseconds in the drying chamber) limits thermal degradation, despite high inlet temperatures. Freeze-dried organic spirulina commands a 40–80% price premium and is used in premium raw powder products marketed for maximum nutrient retention.


Nutritional Composition and Specification Parameters

Full Proximate Analysis (per 100 g dry weight, A. platensis)

NutrientTypical RangeNotes
Total Protein60–70 gComplete protein with all essential amino acids; PDCAAS = 0.85–0.92
Total Carbohydrate12–20 gPrimarily polysaccharides and glycoproteins
Dietary Fiber3–8 gInsoluble fiber from cell wall; non-starch polysaccharides
Total Fat4–8 gRich in GLA (gamma-linolenic acid)
Ash6–10 gMineral content
Moisture4–7 gPost-drying residual

Amino Acid Profile (per 100 g protein)

Amino Acidg/100g ProteinFAO/WHO Reference (Adult)
Isoleucine6.0–6.73.0
Leucine8.7–9.85.9
Lysine4.7–5.24.5
Methionine + Cysteine3.0–3.52.2
Phenylalanine + Tyrosine8.8–9.53.8
Threonine4.6–5.32.3
Tryptophan1.3–1.50.6
Valine6.7–7.43.9
Histidine1.8–2.21.5

Spirulina meets or exceeds all FAO/WHO essential amino acid reference values for adults, making it a genuine complete protein source. The limiting amino acid is typically methionine + cysteine, though it still exceeds the reference value.

Fatty Acid Profile (% of total fatty acids)

Fatty Acid%Significance
Palmitic Acid (C16:0)35–45%Major saturated fatty acid
Gamma-Linolenic Acid (GLA, C18:3 n-6)18–25%Key bioactive; anti-inflammatory; rare in food sources
Linoleic Acid (C18:2 n-6)10–15%Essential fatty acid
Oleic Acid (C18:1 n-9)3–8%Monounsaturated
Alpha-Linolenic Acid (ALA, C18:3 n-3)0.5–1.5%Omega-3

GLA is a distinguishing feature of spirulina among microalgae. Few dietary sources (evening primrose oil, borage oil) provide GLA in meaningful quantities.

Pigments and Bioactive Compounds

CompoundTypical RangeAnalytical Method
Phycocyanin (C-PC)8–18%Spectrophotometric (A620/A280)
Allophycocyanin (APC)2–5%Spectrophotometric (A652)
Chlorophyll a0.8–1.5%Spectrophotometric (A663)
Total Carotenoids0.3–0.6%Spectrophotometric (A450)
Beta-Carotene150–250 mg/100gHPLC
Zeaxanthin50–100 mg/100gHPLC
Superoxide Dismutase (SOD)400–800 IU/gEnzymatic assay

Phycocyanin content is the single most commercially significant quality parameter for organic spirulina. It correlates directly with:

  • Nutritional value (protein-pigment complex)
  • Visual color intensity (blue-green hue)
  • Price grade (premium phycocyanin-rich spirulina commands 30–60% price premium)
  • Stability in food applications (higher phycocyanin = more vibrant natural coloring)

Mineral Profile (per 100 g)

MineralTypical Range% RDI (Adult)
Iron28–58 mg155–322%
Potassium1,200–1,800 mg26–38%
Magnesium250–400 mg60–95%
Calcium400–700 mg40–70%
Phosphorus800–1,200 mg64–96%
Zinc2–4 mg18–36%
Selenium5–20 μg9–36%
Manganese3–5 mg130–217%
Sodium600–1,200 mgVariable — depends on culture medium washout

Spirulina’s iron content is notably high (28–58 mg/100g), exceeding most plant sources. The iron is non-heme and its bioavailability is enhanced by the absence of phytates and oxalates that typically inhibit iron absorption in plant foods.


Quality Specifications and Testing

Identity and Purity

ParameterSpecificationTest Method
Microscopic IdentificationFilamentous cyanobacterium, helical trichomes, 6–12 μm widthUSP <561> / Ph. Eur. 2.8.23
Phycocyanin (A620/A280)≥ 0.80UV-Vis Spectrophotometry
Protein (N × 6.25)≥ 55%Kjeldahl / Dumas
Ash≤ 12%Gravimetric, 550°C
Moisture≤ 7%Karl Fischer / Loss on Drying
pH (1% suspension)6.0–8.5Potentiometric

Contaminants and Safety

ParameterOrganic Limit (EU)Conventional LimitTest Method
Lead (Pb)≤ 0.5 mg/kg≤ 2.0 mg/kgICP-MS / AAS
Cadmium (Cd)≤ 0.1 mg/kg≤ 0.5 mg/kgICP-MS / AAS
Mercury (Hg)≤ 0.05 mg/kg≤ 0.1 mg/kgCV-AAS / ICP-MS
Arsenic (As)≤ 0.5 mg/kg≤ 1.0 mg/kgICP-MS / AAS
Microcystin-LRNot detected (LOD 0.1 μg/kg)≤ 1.0 μg/kgLC-MS/MS
Total Aerobic Count≤ 100,000 CFU/g≤ 300,000 CFU/gISO 4833
Yeasts & Moulds≤ 1,000 CFU/g≤ 5,000 CFU/gISO 21527
Enterobacteriaceae≤ 100 CFU/g≤ 1,000 CFU/gISO 21528
E. coliAbsent in 1 gAbsent in 1 gISO 16649
SalmonellaAbsent in 25 gAbsent in 25 gISO 6579
Staphylococcus aureusAbsent in 1 g≤ 100 CFU/gISO 6888
Aflatoxins (B1+B2+G1+G2)≤ 2 μg/kg≤ 4 μg/kgHPLC-FLD

Microcystin testing is non-negotiable for spirulina. Because Arthrospira is cultivated in alkaline ponds where cyanobacterial blooms of toxin-producing Microcystis can occur as contaminants, every batch must be screened for microcystins. The EU organic regulation and the USP monograph both mandate a “not detected” result for microcystin-LR at 0.1 μg/kg LOD.

Physical Properties

ParameterSpecification
Particle Size (D50)50–150 μm (spray-dried); 100–300 μm (freeze-dried, milled)
Bulk Density0.35–0.55 g/mL
Tapped Density0.55–0.75 g/mL
ColorDark blue-green to dark green (varies by phycocyanin:chlorophyll ratio)
OdorCharacteristic marine/seaweed, mild
Water Activity (aw)≤ 0.45
DispersibilityForms suspension in water; sinks slowly; stirs into uniform dispersion

10-Category Application Matrix

Application CategoryDosage (g/100g or g/serving)Functional RoleTechnical Notes
Smoothie Powders & Green Blends2–5 g/servingProtein + phytonutrient enrichmentBlend with fruit powders to mask marine notes; mango and pineapple complementary
Protein Bars3–8 g/barComplete protein + natural coloringBinds water aggressively; reduce liquid in dough by 3–5% per gram spirulina
Tablets & Capsules500 mg–1 g/unitConcentrated nutrient deliveryRequires flow aid (0.5% silicon dioxide) for compression; hygroscopic — store with desiccant
Functional Beverages (RTD)0.5–2 g/servingNatural color + protein fortificationPre-hydrate powder in 5× water for 10 min before adding to batch to prevent clumping
Plant-Based Dairy Alternatives1–3 g/servingProtein enrichment + blue-green hueCompatible with oat, almond, and coconut bases; pH <4.5 may cause protein precipitation
Bakery (Bread, Crackers)2–5% of flour weightProtein + fiber fortificationReduces loaf volume by 3–8%; dough handling becomes stickier; increase hydration by 2–3%
Pasta & Noodles3–6% of semolinaProtein + colorAl dente texture slightly compromised; optimum at 3% for durum wheat pasta
Snack Seasonings5–15% of seasoning blendSavory umami note + colorPair with onion, garlic, nutritional yeast to harmonize flavor
Pet Food & Treats1–3% of formulaFunctional ingredient for coat healthWell-accepted by dogs; feline palatability varies
Cosmetics (Face Masks, Scrubs)2–10% of formulaAntioxidant + natural pigmentOil-soluble chlorophyll may stain fabrics; patch test for blue-green transfer

Stability and Shelf Life

Storage ConditionPhycocyanin Retention (12 mo)Color StabilityMicrobial Stability
Ambient (25°C, 60% RH)70–80%Moderate fadingStable if aw ≤ 0.45
Cool (15°C, dark)85–92%GoodStable
Refrigerated (4°C, dark)92–97%ExcellentStable
Elevated (40°C)40–55%Significant browningRisk of Maillard browning

Degradation mechanisms:

  • Phycocyanin: Thermal denaturation above 45°C; photo-oxidation under UV/visible light; pH-dependent precipitation below pH 4.0
  • Lipid oxidation: GLA is highly unsaturated; oxidation accelerated above 30°C and by light exposure
  • Maillard browning: Free amino groups react with reducing sugars; accelerated above aw 0.50

Recommended packaging: Aluminum foil-laminated pouches with oxygen absorber, nitrogen-flushed. Shelf life: 24 months from production date under recommended storage (15–25°C, ≤60% RH, dark).


Comparison with Other Microalgae and Plant Proteins

ParameterOrganic SpirulinaOrganic ChlorellaOrganic Pea ProteinOrganic Hemp Protein
Protein Content (dry)60–70%50–60%80–85%45–55%
PDCAAS0.85–0.920.80–0.890.82–0.890.46–0.63
Phycocyanin8–18%0%0%0%
Chlorophyll0.8–1.5%2–4%0%0%
GLA18–25% of fat0%0%0%
Iron (mg/100g)28–5880–1505–88–15
Cell Wall DigestibilityHigh (no cellulose wall)Low (requires cell wall disruption)HighHigh
GMO RiskLow (no commercial GMO culture)LowMedium (GMO pea varieties exist)Low
Organic AvailabilityWidely availableWidely availableWidely availableGrowing

For a deeper comparison between spirulina and chlorella, including application-specific selection criteria for B2B buyers, see our Spirulina vs. Chlorella Comparison Guide.


Organic Certification Landscape

CertificationRegionKey Requirements for Spirulina
EU Organic (EC 834/2007)European UnionSodium nitrate must be mined (not synthetic); water source must be analyzed for pesticide residues annually; no ionizing radiation for decontamination
USDA Organic (NOP)United StatesSodium nitrate permitted only if mined Chilean nitrate and certified organic-compliant by accredited certifier; buffer zone documentation mandatory
China Organic (GB/T 19630)ChinaFull traceability of culture medium inputs; annual on-site inspection by CNCA-accredited certifier
JAS OrganicJapanEquivalent to USDA NOP with additional documentation for GMO-free status
Bio SuisseSwitzerlandMore restrictive than EU; requires on-farm nutrient cycling where feasible; sodium nitrate use subject to derogation
NaturlandGermanyMost restrictive; prohibits mined sodium nitrate entirely; requires closed-loop nutrient cycling or organic-certified nutrient sources

Supplier Evaluation: Key Questions for Procurement Teams

When evaluating organic spirulina suppliers, the following questions should form part of any technical audit or RFQ process:

  1. Species and strain: Is the culture A. platensis or A. maxima? Has the strain been genetically characterized? Is strain purity monitored via microscopy at regular intervals?
  2. Cultivation location and climate: Latitude, annual sunshine hours, and seasonal temperature range directly affect productivity and phycocyanin content. Equatorial and subtropical locations (15–25° latitude) typically achieve the highest phycocyanin levels.
  3. Drying method: Spray-dried or freeze-dried? Request phycocyanin retention data from post-harvest to finished powder.
  4. Water source: Groundwater, surface water, or municipal? What is the water treatment protocol? How frequently is the source tested for pesticides and heavy metals?
  5. Microcystin testing frequency: Every batch, or pooled? What is the LOD of the LC-MS/MS method? Can the supplier provide a third-party COA for the most recent 12 months of microcystin results?
  6. Organic certification body: Which certifier, and are they accredited under the target market’s organic regulation? Is the certificate current and unbroken for the claimed organic period?
  7. Supply continuity: What is the annual production capacity? What is the historical production consistency month-over-month? How many harvest days per year (climate-dependent)?

For broader market context including global supply dynamics, price trends, and regional production analysis, see our Spirulina Market and B2B Procurement Guide.


Contact Us for technical specifications, batch-specific certificates of analysis, or to request samples for your formulation team.

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