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  • Offshore cultivation of seaweed provides an innovative feedstock for biobased products supporting blue growth in northern Europe. This paper analyzes two alternative exploitation pathways: energy and protein production. The first pathway is based on anaerobic digestion of seaweed which is converted into biogas, for production of electricity and heat, and digestate, used as fertilizer; the second pathway uses seaweed hydrolysate as a substrate for cultivation of heterotrophic microalgae. As a result the seaweed sugars are consumed while new proteins are produced enhancing the total output. We performed a comparative Life Cycle Assessment of five scenarios identifying the critical features affecting resource efficiency and environmental performance of the systems with the aim of providing decision support for the design of future industrial scale production processes. The results show that all scenarios provide environmental benefits in terms of mitigation of climate change, with biogas production from dried Laminaria digitata being the most favorable scenario, quantified as 18.7*102 kg CO2 eq./ha. This scenario presents also the lowest consumption of total cumulative energy demand, 1.7*104 MJ/ha, and even resulting in a net reduction of the fossil energy fraction, 1.9*104 MJ/ha compared to a situation without seaweed cultivation. All scenarios provide mitigation of marine eutrophication thanks to bioextraction of nitrogen and phosphorus during seaweed growth. The material consumption for seeded lines has 2e20 times higher impact on human toxicity (cancer) than the reduction achieved by energy and protein substitution. However, minor changes in cultivation design, i.e. use of stones instead of iron as ballast to weight the seeded lines, dramatically reduces human toxicity (cancer). Externalities from the use of digestate as fertilizer affect human toxicity (non-cancer) due to transfer of arsenic from aquatic environment to agricultural soil. However concentration of heavy metals in digestate does not exceed the limit established by Danish regulation. The assessment identifies seaweed productivity as the key parameter to further improve the performance of the production systems which are a promising service provider of environmental restoration and climate change mitigatio

    Author(s): Michele Seghetta, Daina Romeo, Martina D'Este, Merlin Alvarado-Morales, Irini Angelidaki, Simone Bastianoni, Marianne Thomsen
  • Plastics are carbon-based polymers and we make them mostly from petroleum. With the discovery of plastics, life became much more convenient because it is used to make a wide array of useful materials. But these plastics are so durable that it will take many centuries for these plastics to completely degrade while other plastics will last forever. Discarded plastics are also a big cause of pollution and because of that, plastics make our environment a much less attractive place (Atienza, 2009).

    Getting rid of plastics is extremely difficult. Burning these plastics gives off harmful chemicals such as dioxins that could contribute to Global Warming. Recycling these plastics is also difficult because there are many different kinds of plastics and each has to be recycled by a different process. Though these plastics are considered to be one of the greatest innovations ever, they are also imposing a great havoc to the environment, the wildlife and the general public (Woodford, 2008). For this reason, this study aims to develop a biomass-based plastic from the natural polysaccharides of seaweeds.

    Biomass-based plastics or bioplastics are a form of plastics derived from renewable biomass resources like vegetable oil or corn starch rather than the conventional plastics which are made from petroleum. Their advantage are innumerable and one is their capability to biodegrade naturally within a short period of time only (Sweeney, 2008). 

    Seaweeds are best known for the natural polysaccharides that can be extracted from them which are widely used particularly in the fields of food technology, biotechnology, microbiology and even medicine but not yet in the plastic industry. Some of these polysaccharides are Floridean starch, agar and alginate (Montano, 2010) Since they are renewable biomass resources and are polymers made from sugars which contain carbon, they could be used to create a bioplastic. 

    In this study, the natural polysaccharides from selected Philippine marine seaweeds will be utilized to develop a biodegradable and high-quality bioplastic. 

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  • Seaweeds have been used as supplementary feed for livestock in Norway for centuries. Research activities on the use of seaweed as feed started early last century and continued until the late 1960s. The results were elusive, partly because the design of the experiments were imperfect. However, a long term experiment in the 1960’s demonstrated 6% higher milk production by cows supplemented mineral fortified Ascophyllum nodosum meal than in cows offered standard mineral supplement. The authors suggested that seaweed compounds might have had benficial effect on the rumen microflora. Seaweeds are a rich source of Se and antioxidants such as substituted phenols, polyphenols, vitamins, and vitamin precursors. Results from research last 10-20 years suggests that dietary supplementation with A. nodosum meal has positive effects on ruminant product quality and stress tolerance. Alginates have been documented to be non-specific immunostimulants. A. nodosum is currently commersially harvested and processed and sold as a feed supplement. Winter fed sheep and cattle in Norway needs to be given extra fat soluble vitamins and minerals, particularly vitamin E and Se, in order to ensure good animal health and production. Based on the aquired knowledge from international reseach on A. nodosum and its possible beneficial health effect, we tested if A. nodosum has immunestimulating effect and can be used as a substitute for synthetic vitamin E in sheep and cattle. Our hypothesis were that supplementing the diet with seaweed to sheep and lactating dairy cows would produce better adaptive immune response following immunization compared to no supplementation and similar to animals given extra vitamin E. Two feeding experiments were conducted, one continous with 40 pregnant ewes and one with 24 lactating dairy cows in a replicated Latin square design. The four supplement treatments applied were: A. Nodosum meal (SW), Natural vitamin E, Synthetic vitamin E, or Control. The average daily rate of A. Nodosum meal per ewe and cow in SW was 80 and 200 g DM, respectively. The ewes and their newborn lambs were monitored the entire indoor feeding period, from mating until pasture let out (200 d). In the ewes, supplementation with SW had no health effects compared to the other treatments, and serum IgG concentrations were reduced in the SW group.The adaptive immunity of the lambs was not affected by supplementation, and seaweed reduced the counts of different intestinal bacterial groups. However, seaweed interferred with the lambs passive immunity resulting in a mortality rate of 35 %, compared with 10% in Control. All cows responded well to immunization, but there were no significant effects of the diet on the immune response measured. The immunesupression observed in newborn lambs from ewes offered SW was likely du to impaired Ig absorption from colostrum, and we conclude that ruminants should not be supplemented with seaweed during peripartum. More research is needed on the identification of bioactive components in seaweed, their effects in animal health, the mechanisms related to their effects on the animal health and testing before seaweed should be used as a feed supplement to ruminants.

    Author(s): Margarita Novoa-Garrido, Håvard Steinshamn
  • Background: Seaweeds are often cited as alternative protein sources for livestock due to their global distribution, nutritional profile and independence from terrestrial agricultural resources. Scope and approach: Here, we critically appraise the literature and quantitatively assess seaweeds as a protein source in livestock feeds by assembling a database of amino acid data for 121 seaweed species and comparing the quality and concentration of protein to ‘traditional’ protein sources (soybean meal and fishmeal) and then benchmarking the seaweeds against the amino acid requirements of monogastric livestock (chicken, swine and fish). Key findings and conclusions: The quality of protein (% of essential amino acids in total amino acids) of many seaweeds is similar to, if not better than, traditional protein sources. However, seaweeds without exception have substantially lower concentrations of total essential amino acids, methionine and lysine (on a whole biomass basis, % dw) than traditional protein sources. Correspondingly, seaweeds contain an insufficient concentration of protein, and specifically insufficient essential amino acids, to meet the requirements of most mono-gastric livestock in the whole seaweed form. Consequently, the concentration or extraction of protein from seaweeds will be the most important goal in their development as an alternative source of protein for mono-gastric livestock.

    Author(s): Alex R. Angell, Simon F. Angell, Rocky de Nys, Nicholas A. Paul
  • Seaweed aquaculture technologies have developed dramatically over the past 70 years mostly in Asia and more recently in Americas and Europe. However, there are still many challenges to overcome with respect to the science and to social acceptability. The challenges include the development of strains with thermo-tolerance, disease resistance, fast growth, high concentration of desired molecules, the reduction of fouling organisms and the development of more robust and cost efficient farm systems that can withstand storm events in offshore environments. It is also important to note that seaweed aquaculture provides ecosystem services, which improve conditions of the coastal waters for the benefit of other living organisms and the environment. The ecosystem services role of seaweed aquaculture and its economic value will also be quantitatively estimated in this review. 

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  • Seaweed aquaculture technologies have developed dramatically over the past 70 years mostly in Asia and more recent-ly in Americas and Europe. However, there are still many challenges to overcome with respect to the science and to socialacceptability. The challenges include the development of strains with thermo-tolerance, disease resistance, fast growth,high concentration of desired molecules, the reduction of fouling organisms and the development of more robust andcost efficient farm systems that can withstand storm events in offshore environments. It is also important to note thatseaweed aquaculture provides ecosystem services, which improve conditions of the coastal waters for the benefit of otherliving organisms and the environment. The ecosystem services role of seaweed aquaculture and its economic value willalso be quantitatively estimated in this review.

    Author(s): Youngdae Kim, Miseon Park, Eun Kyoung Hwang, Charles Yarish, Jang K. Kim
  • Like many other estuaries and coastal regions, Long Island Sound suffers from anthropogenic eutrophication. This phenomenon, the addition of nutrients to the system as a result of human activities, is a consequence of the human alteration of the nitrogen cycle on a global scale. In coastal waters and estuaries primary production by phytoplankton, seaweeds, and seagrasses is generally limited by the availability of dissolved inorganic nitrogen, present as nitrate, nitrite, and ammonium. The sources of the inorganic nitrogen added into coastal waters and estuaries are several: fertilizer run-off from residences, agriculture, septic seep into groundwater, fossil fuel combustion, and wastewater treatment plant discharges.

    Author(s): Yarish, Charles George P. Kraemer, Jang K. Kim
  • Used mostly for the extraction of  phycocolloids, seaweeds remain a  relatively untapped resource with a  huge potential as edible food, feed  ingredients, cosmetics, agrichemicals,  biomaterials and bioenergy  molecules. Since they are also significant  nutrient and carbon sinks for this planet, seaweeds should be the objects of trading credits for the ecosystem services they render. However, some biotechnological issues and societal constraints remain. A long-term interdisciplinary implementation strategy based on aquanomy principles needs to be developed.

    Author(s): Thierry Chopin
  • Seaweeds play key roles in Earth processes and are the world’s largest mariculture crop. They are primary producers and links in the food webs of coastal and estuarine ecosystems, and are used in many applications that affect our everyday lives. About 220 species of seaweeds are cultivated worldwide, primarily in Asia. It has been estimated that the productivity of seaweed communities is equal to or greater than that of the most productive terrestrial plant communities. 

     

    ** Condensed Powerpoint slide as PDF and original PDF version available.

    Author(s): Thierry Chopin
  • Seaweed is a popular term used to collectively describe marine macroalgae. Among this large and diverse  assemblage of photosynthetic marine organisms are  a number of species with a varied array of uses; when  used for human consumption, they are more popularly  known as “sea-vegetables.” This collective of convenience includes the macroscopic, multicellular, red,  green, and brown algae. Seaweeds are often abundant and predominantly found in the near-shore  marine ecosystems in all the oceans of the world. As a result of their diverse intercellular compounds  including alginic acid, carrageenans, and agar, seaweeds  have very important industrial applications.

    Being important primary producers in marine ecosystems, macroalgae are an integral component of near-shore environment and form a fundamental part of the basis of the photosynthetic food chains, playing a role similar to that of terrestrial plants. In these natural environments, seaweeds often perform a large number of ecosystem services (e.g., nurseries, nutrient cycling, and reduction of coastal erosion among others), which are neither fully costed nor often appreciated by the public or users of the marine environment. Humans have wild harvested (sometimes called “wild crafting”) and cultivated seaweeds for several centuries for animal and human consumption as well as other applications including valuable sources of phycocolloids and most recently, researched as feedstock for biofuels and carbon sequestration.

    Author(s): Rui Pereira, Charles Yarish, Alan T. Critchley

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