WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — Purdue College has acquired a five-year, $10 million grant from the U.S. Division of Agriculture to extend the manufacturing of seafood, often known as “blue meals,” which is more healthy and extra sustainably produced than land-based meals.
« Many research point out the significance of accelerating seafood consumption in U.S. diets,” stated Jen-Yi Huang, mission director and affiliate professor of food science at Purdue College. These research present that seafood can enhance consumption of wholesome omega-3 fatty acids, nutritional vitamins and minerals whereas additionally decreasing extra dangerous substances corresponding to ldl cholesterol and saturated fats.
A 2021 blue meals evaluation revealed within the journal Nature discovered {that a} 15.5-million-ton improve in aquatic animal-source meals by 2030 would lower the value of such meals by 26%. The ensuing improve in blue meals consumption would end in stopping an estimated 166 million circumstances of insufficient consumption of micronutrients corresponding to vitamin A, calcium and iron worldwide.
Seafood is available in native grocery shops, however most of it’s imported from Asia and elsewhere. Such long-distance provide chains lately have confirmed susceptible to risky markets, fluctuating gasoline prices, the COVID-19 pandemic and regional struggle, stated Huang, who additionally holds a courtesy appointment in Environmental and Ecological Engineering.
Bob Rode, at left, supervisor of the Aquaculture Analysis Lab, and technician Ian Kovacs are likely to tilapia raised within the facility. Paul Brown, professor of forestry and pure assets at Purdue College, oversees the lab’s experimental aquaponics programs. (Purdue College picture/Tom Campbell)
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About 90% of U.S. seafood comes from overseas, leading to a $17 billion commerce deficit. U.S. fisheries usually are not sustainable due to overfishing considerations, Huang famous. Aquaculture — rising aquatic organisms beneath managed situations — presents an alternate.
Aquaponics is a mix of aquaculture and hydroponics (rising vegetation in water) that provides the benefit of intensively producing seafood and vegetation utilizing much less land and water than typical meals manufacturing.
The Midwest particularly may benefit from aquaponics. The area suffers excessive weight problems charges, operates the fewest aquaculture farms and consumes the least quantity of seafood.
“It may improve manufacturing yields, however aquaponics manufacturing hasn’t been extensively adopted, particularly within the Midwest,” Huang stated. Power use within the required greenhouse surroundings is one key purpose.
Aquaponics operations require the every day discharge of as much as 20% of wastewater into the surroundings. For giant farms, that turns into a upkeep price as a result of they want permits to deal with their wastewater earlier than discharge.
“The smaller farms don’t want permits,” Huang stated. “They’ll discharge no matter they generate, which might trigger environmental points.”
With the USDA funding, Purdue researchers will construct a pilot-scale built-in aquaponics system on campus, the place some lab-scale parts exist already, to provide tilapia and lettuce.
Purdue researchers will construct a pilot-scale built-in aquaponics system on campus to provide tilapia and lettuce. This zero-waste meals manufacturing system will convert nutrient-rich waste into power for system operation and high-value bioproducts. (Illustration by Tom Kronewitter)
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Paul Brown, professor of forestry and natural resources, operates experimental aquaponics programs within the Aquaculture Analysis Lab. Halis Simsek, assistant professor of agricultural and biological engineering, maintains bioreactors in his laboratory for algae cultivation. Jiqin Ni, professor of agricultural and biological engineering, works with anaerobic digesters, which use microorganisms to interrupt down biodegradable matter in an oxygen-free surroundings.
Further Purdue researchers collaborating on this analysis are Natalie Carroll, professor of agricultural sciences education and communication and agricultural and biological engineering; Abigail Engelberth, affiliate professor of agricultural and biological engineering and environmental and ecological engineering; Betty Feng, assistant professor of food science; Andrea Liceaga, affiliate professor of food science; Lindsey Payne, assistant professor of environmental and ecological engineering; Kwamena Quagrainie, professor of agricultural economics and forestry and natural resources; and George Zhou, affiliate professor of civil engineering and environmental and ecological engineering.
Additionally on the crew is Nicole Wright, aquaculture extension educator at The Ohio State College.
“Algae cultivation and anaerobic digestion are two of an important parts in Purdue’s built-in aquaponic system,” Ni stated. “We use the algae to deal with the wastewater and likewise anaerobic digestion to deal with the algal biomass and different waste streams like fish processing wastes.”
The Purdue system will direct the aquaponics wastewater discharge into algal bioreactors, the place algae can feed on its vitamins. The subsequent step is anaerobic digestion, which generates biogas gasoline as one in every of its merchandise.
« That power could be despatched again to the aquaponics system to offset the power requirement of the indoor facility operation, at the least partially,” Huang stated. The system is designed to generate zero waste and to function independently of the facility grid.
The system additionally features a biorefinery subsystem to transform algae and fish byproducts into high-value nutraceuticals corresponding to bioactive peptide and phenolic compounds. The biorefinery can flip the algae into fish feed for the aquaponics operation as effectively.
“By integration with the biorefinery, we are able to have extra revenues for aquaponics farmers in order that they will enhance their financial viability,” Huang stated. “We are going to develop multidimensional sustainability metrics for system evaluation and administration to be sure that this sort of integration is technically possible, economically viable and environmentally pleasant.”
The mission will additional embrace stakeholder training and outreach parts. The analysis crew will survey farmers and suppliers in regards to the boundaries and alternatives for blue meals and aquaponics. The crew additionally will develop workshops to assist farmers construct aquaponics programs or enhance their current operations.
As well as, the grant will foster a workforce that may help blue meals manufacturing by funding the creation of instructional supplies for highschool, undergraduate and graduate college students.
“We additionally need to educate shoppers on the good thing about blue meals in order that they will diversify their dietary sample to incorporate extra blue meals and in the end enhance well being,” Huang stated.
Author: Steve Koppes
Media contact: Maureen Manier, mmanier@purdue.edu
Supply: Jen-Yi Huang, huang874@purdue.edu
Agricultural Communications: 765-494-8415;
Maureen Manier, Division Head, mmanier@purdue.edu