4.6 Article

Agronomic and Environmental Performance of Lemna minor Cultivated on Agricultural Wastewater Streams-A Practical Approach

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13031570

Keywords

biological effluent treatment; nutrient recycling; Lemnaceae; constructed wetlands; protein alternatives; amino acid composition

Funding

  1. Flemish government within the framework of Circular Flanders project: Waardeketen Eendenkroos [OC-SO-2018 201]
  2. H2020 project Nutri2Cycle [773682]

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This study demonstrates that duckweed can effectively remove nutrients from agricultural wastewaters while producing quality protein. Different wastewaters had an impact on the productivity of duckweed, but had minimal effect on its amino acid composition or protein content.
This study investigated the potential of Lemna minor to valorise agricultural wastewater in protein-rich feed material in order to meet the growing demand for animal feed protein and reduce the excess of nutrients in certain European regions. For this purpose, three pilot-scale systems were monitored for 175 days under outdoor conditions in Flanders. The systems were fed with the effluent of aquaculture (pikeperch production-PP), a mixture of diluted pig manure wastewater (PM), and a synthetic medium (SM). PM showed the highest productivity (6.1 +/- 2.5 g DW m(-2) d(-1)) and N uptake (327 +/- 107 mg N m(-2) d(-1)). PP yielded a similar productivity and both wastewaters resulted in higher productivities than SM. Furthermore, all media showed similar P uptake rates (65-70 P m(-2) d(-1)). Finally, duckweed had a beneficial amino acid composition for humans (essential amino acid index = 1.1), broilers and pigs. This study also showed that the growing medium had more influence on the productivity of duckweed than on its amino acid composition or protein content, with the latter being only slightly affected by the different media studied. Overall, these results demonstrate that duckweed can effectively remove nutrients from agriculture wastewaters while producing quality protein.

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