Burghead Algal Research Facility

Burghead Algal Research Facility Providing Omega 3 laden algae for fish food in a unique harbourside facility incorporating a demonstration fish farm, aquarium and museum.

12/10/2025

🌊 Norway just discovered the ocean's secret weapon against climate change! While we've been planting trees on land, they're growing underwater forests that absorb CO₂ 60 times faster. This brilliant solution is turning the sea into a massive carbon-eating machine that also produces fuel!

Another great use for laminaria
10/10/2025

Another great use for laminaria

In Germany, a sizzling innovation is reshaping breakfast plates and saving millions of piglets. Startups have developed crispy, flavorful bacon made entirely from seaweed lipids, offering the taste and texture of traditional bacon without harming animals.

The process begins with extracting healthy fats from seaweed, which are then blended with natural flavor compounds and smoked to mimic the savory aroma of pork bacon. The result? Strips that sizzle, crisp, and satisfy cravings, but are 100% plant-based and cruelty-free.

This breakthrough tackles both animal welfare and environmental impact. By replacing conventional pork, it reduces the demand for factory-farmed pigs, sparing over 50 million piglets annually, while also cutting greenhouse gas emissions associated with traditional livestock farming.

Distributed in supermarkets, cafes, and meal-kit services, this bacon lets consumers enjoy beloved dishes like BLTs, breakfast platters, and burgers, while making an ethical choice. Each bite delivers the familiar indulgence of bacon without compromise.

Germany’s seaweed bacon represents a new frontier in sustainable protein—where innovation meets taste, ethics, and planetary responsibility. As global demand for plant-based alternatives rises, such technologies may redefine the future of our food system.

18/05/2022

What's the issue here? Sewage, algal proteins, pulp mill black liquor...?

Algal future
07/09/2021

Algal future

An Australian craft brewery is using microalgae to turn their carbon emissions into oxygen.

Aztec FoodSpirulina was a food source for the Aztecs and other Mesoamericans until the 16th century; the harvest from La...
04/01/2019

Aztec Food

Spirulina was a food source for the Aztecs and other Mesoamericans until the 16th century; the harvest from Lake Texcoco and subsequent sale as cakes were described by one of Cortés' soldiers. The Aztecs called it "tecuitlatl".

Spirulina is a cyanobacterium that can be consumed by humans and other animals. There are two species, Arthrospira platensis and Arthrospira maxima.

Arthrospira is cultivated worldwide; used as a dietary supplement as well as a whole food; and is also available in tablet, flake and powder form. It is also used as a feed supplement in the aquaculture, aquarium and poultry industries.

Nutrient and vitamin content
Protein

Dried spirulina contains about 60% (51–71%) protein. It is a complete protein containing all essential amino acids, though with reduced amounts of methionine, cysteine and lysine when compared to the proteins of meat, eggs and milk. It is, however, superior to typical plant protein, such as that from legumes.

The U.S. National Library of Medicine said that spirulina was no better than milk or meat as a protein source, and was approximately 30 times more expensive.

Other nutrients

Spirulina's lipid content is about 7% by weight, and is rich in gamma-linolenic acid (GLA), and also provides alpha-linolenic acid (ALA), linoleic acid (LA), stearidonic acid (SDA),eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), and arachidonic acid (AA). Spirulina contains vitamins B1 (thiamine), B2 (riboflavin), B3 (nicotinamide), B6 (pyridoxine), B9 (folic acid), vitamin C, vitamin A, and vitamin E. It is also a source of potassium, calcium, chromium, copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, phosphorus, selenium, sodium, and zinc. Spirulina contains many pigments which may be beneficial and bioavailable, including beta-carotene,zeaxanthin,7-hydroxyretinoic acid,isomers, chlorophyll-a, xanthophyll, echinenone, myxoxanthophyll, canthaxanthin, diatoxanthin, 3'-hydroxyechinenone, beta-cryptoxanthin, and oscillaxanthin, plus the phycobiliproteinsc-phycocyanin and allophycocyanin.
Vitamin B12 controversy

Spirulina is not considered to be a reliable source of Vitamin B12. Spirulina supplements contain predominantly pseudovitamin B12, which is biologically inactive in humans. Companies which grow and market spirulina have claimed it to be a significant source of B12 on the basis of alternative, unpublished assays, although their claims are not accepted by independent scientific organizations. The American Dietetic Association and Dietitians of Canada in their position paper on vegetarian diets state that spirulina cannot be counted on as a reliable source of active vitamin B12. The medical literature similarly advises that spirulina is unsuitable as a source of B12.
Risks
Toxicological studies

Toxicological studies of the effects of spirulina consumption on humans and animals, including feeding as much as 800 mg/kg, and replacing up to 60% of protein intake with spirulina, have shown no toxic effects. Fertility, teratogenicity, peri- and post-natal, and multi-generational studies on animals also have found no adverse effects from spirulina consumption.

Quality-related safety issues

Spirulina is a form of cyanobacterium, some of which are known to produce toxins such as microcystins, BMAA, and others. Some spirulina supplements have been found to be contaminated with microcystins, albeit at levels below the limit set by the Oregon Health Department. Microcystins can cause gastrointestinal disturbances and, in the long term, liver cancer. The effects of chronic exposure to even very low levels of microcystins are of concern, because of the potential risk of cancer.

These toxic compounds are not produced by spirulina itself, but may occur as a result of contamination of spirulina batches with other toxin-producing blue-green algae. Because spirulina is considered a dietary supplement in the U.S., there is no active, industry-wide regulation of its production and no enforced safety standards for its production or purity. The U.S. National Institutes of Health describes spirulina supplements as "possibly safe", provided they are free of microcystin contamination, but "likely unsafe" (especially for children) if contaminated. Given the lack of regulatory standards in the U.S., some public-health researchers have raised the concern that consumers cannot be certain that spirulina and other blue-green algae supplements are free of contamination.

Heavy-metal contamination of spirulina supplements has also raised concern. The Chinese State Food and Drug Administration reported that lead, mercury, and arsenic contamination was widespread in spirulina supplements marketed in China.

Safety issues for certain target groups

Due to very high Vitamin K content, patients undergoing anticoagulant treatments should not change consumption patterns of spirulina without seeking medical advice to adjust the level of medication accordingly.

Like all protein-rich foods, spirulina contains the essential amino acid phenylalanine (2.6-4.1 g/100 g), which should be avoided by people who have phenylketonuria, a rare genetic disorder that prevents the body from metabolizing phenylalanine, which then builds up in the brain, causing damage.

Essential information, get the microscope out!
11/08/2017

Essential information, get the microscope out!

Freshwater algae: Identification, enumeration and use as bioindicators
now available at SEAFDEC Aquaculture Department Library

Bellinger, E. G. & Sigee, D. C. (Eds.). (2015). Freshwater algae: Identification, enumeration and use as bioindicators. West Sussex, UK: John Wiley.
ISBN: 978-1-118-91716-9
Wiley-Blackwell
http://as.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1118917162.html

Description

This is the second edition of Freshwater Algae; the popular guide to temperate freshwater algae. This book uniquely combines practical information on sampling and experimental techniques with an explanation of basic algal taxonomy plus a key to identify the more frequently-occurring organisms. Fully revised, it describes major bioindicator species in relation to key environmental parameters and their implications for aquatic management.

This second edition includes:

the same clear writing style as the first edition to provide an easily accessible source of information on algae within standing and flowing waters, and the problems they may cause

the identification of 250 algae using a key based on readily observable morphological features that can be readily observed under a conventional light microscope

up-to-date information on the molecular determination of taxonomic status, analytical microtechniques and the potential role of computer analysis in algal biology

upgrades to numerous line drawings to include more detail and extra species information, full colour photographs of live algae – including many new images from the USA and China

Bridging the gap between simple identification texts and highly specialised research volumes, this book is
used both as a comprehensive introduction to the subject and as a laboratory manual. The new edition will be invaluable to aquatic biologists for algal identification, and for all practitioners and researchers working within aquatic microbiology in industry and academia.

24/01/2017

Wowhaus designed the Urban Farm, an urban agriculture initiative that teaches children how to grow their own food in Moscow's VDNHk.

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