AQULVA

DossierRAAK.MKB17.015
StatusLopend
Subsidie€ 314.720
Startdatum1 augustus 2023
Einddatum31 juli 2025
RegelingRAAK-mkb
Thema's
  • Duurzame landbouw-, water- en voedselvoorziening
  • Energietransitie en duurzaamheid
  • Ondernemen: verantwoord en vernieuwend
  • Agri & Food
  • Circulaire economie en grondstoffenefficiëntie: Duurzame circulaire impact
  • Duurzame productie van gezond en veilig voedsel
  • De Blauwe route: water als weg naar innovatieve en duurzame groei
  • Agro en Food
  • Energietransitie & duurzaamheid 20-23
  • Landbouw, water en voedsel 20-23

The seaweed aquaculture sector, aimed at cultivation of macroalgal biomass to be converted into commercial applications, can be placed within a sustainable and circular economy framework. This bio-based sector has the potential to aid the European Union meet multiple EU Bioeconomy Strategy, EU Green Deal and Blue Growth Strategy objectives.
Seaweeds play a crucial ecological role within the marine environment and provide several ecosystem services, from the take up of excess nutrients from surrounding seawater to oxygen production and potentially carbon sequestration.
Sea lettuce, Ulva spp., is a green seaweed, growing wild in the Atlantic Ocean and North Sea. Sea lettuce has a high nutritional value and is a promising source for food, animal feed, cosmetics and more. Sea lettuce, when produced in controlled conditions like aquaculture, can supplement our diet with healthy and safe proteins, fibres and vitamins. However, at this moment, Sea lettuce is hardly exploited as resource because of its unfamiliarity but also lack of knowledge about its growth cycle, its interaction with microbiota and eventually, possible applications. Even, it is unknown which Ulva species are available for aquaculture (algaculture) and how these species can contribute to a sustainable aquaculture biomass production.
The AQULVA project aims to investigate which Ulva species are available in the North Sea and Wadden Sea which can be utilised in onshore aquaculture production. Modern genomic, microbiomic and metabolomic profiling techniques alongside ecophysiological production research must reveal suitable Ulva selections with high nutritional value for sustainable onshore biomass production. Selected Ulva spp lines will be used for production of healthy and safe foods, anti-aging cosmetics and added value animal feed supplements for dairy farming. This applied research is in cooperation with a network of SME’s, Research Institutes and Universities of Applied Science and is liaised with EU initiatives like the EU-COST action “SeaWheat”.

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