4.7 Article

Nutritional Composition of Beach-Cast Marine Algae from the Brazilian Coast: Added Value for Algal Biomass Considered as Waste

Journal

FOODS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods11091201

Keywords

amino acids; fatty acids; food; functional ingredient; raw material; seaweeds

Funding

  1. (Federal Ministry of Education and Research-BMBF) [031B0284]
  2. CNPq [304899/2017-8]
  3. CAPES (CoordenacAo de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior) [001]
  4. FAPESP [2018/18015-8]

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Beach-cast seaweeds, which are usually considered waste, have been found to have significant nutritional and bioeconomical potential as a new source of raw materials. Research conducted on 12 seaweed species from the Brazilian coast revealed a considerable amount of nutritional compounds, including proteins, dietary fibers, carbohydrates, minerals, amino acids, and fatty acids. However, further study is needed to assess and address any potential contamination by toxic compounds before considering their use for human consumption.
In some coastal areas, large quantities of beach-cast macroalgae can accumulate and are usually considered waste and disposed of. However, due to their biofunctional and nutritional properties, they have great potential as a new source of raw materials. Increasing population growth has made the search for alternative raw materials with valuable nutritional properties urgent; here, beach-cast macroalgae could provide great potential. Our research goal was to characterize the nutritional profile of 12 beach-cast seaweed species from the Brazilian coast to assess their potential valorization. A considerable number of nutritional compounds was observed, such as ash (6.5-59.3%), total dietary fibers (22.1-65.8%), proteins (5.1-21.5%), and carbohydrates (31.4-81.0%), with an expressive abundance of minerals, free amino acids, and fatty acids. Spatoglossum schroederi and Alsidium seaforthii showed protein contents of 21.5 +/- 0.2%, 19.7 +/- 0.1%, and high amounts of total dietary fiber of 59.2 +/- 0.4%, 61.7 +/- 4.9%, respectively. The overall profile suggests that beach-cast seaweeds are suitable for nutritional and other bioeconomical purposes, to which different species with different characteristics contribute. Contamination of these seaweeds with unwanted toxic compounds like micropollutants was not studied. However, this must be considered before they are used for human consumption.

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