Agricultural wastes for brine shrimp Artemia production: A review

Author:

Ogburn Nepheronia Jumalon1ORCID,Duan Luchun12,Subashchandrabose Suresh Ramraj13,Sorgeloos Patrick4,O'Connor Wayne5,Megharaj Mallavarapu12,Naidu Ravi12

Affiliation:

1. Global Centre for Environmental Remediation The University of Newcastle Callaghan New South Wales Australia

2. Cooperative Research Centre for Contamination Assessment and Remediation of the Environment Callaghan New South Wales Australia

3. Loam Bio Orange New South Wales Australia

4. Laboratory of Aquaculture & Artemia Reference Center Ghent University Ghent Belgium

5. New South Wales Department of Primary Industries Port Stephens Fisheries Institute Taylors Beach New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractAn increasing global population has meant aquaculture, one of the fastest growing food industry sectors, faces significant sustainability challenges as it tries to address the rising global protein demand. In many sectors, production is underpinned by fishmeal as dietary ingredient, but this is a finite resource with competing users from the poultry and livestock industries. Alternatively, some (planktonic) aquatic species, especially brine shrimp Artemia, can be produced using agricultural waste to provide food or biomass to support increasing aquaculture demand. This review investigates research and production of Artemia using agricultural waste. Various systems used for Artemia production in inoculated ponds are analysed and discussed to provide options for environmentally sustainable food systems that can be applied from either an artisanal level in developing countries with a considerable labour force, or in intensive systems in countries with large volumes of under‐utilised resources, for example, sugar/alcohol‐based waste and inland saline areas. Using agricultural waste, single cell protein production in a separate aerobic digester can be a simple, continuous food source for Artemia to enable daily biomass harvest. This could then be used as a fishmeal replacement or possibly for human consumption to promote a circular economy by remediating waste to produce protein, like a food production mine.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology,Aquatic Science

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