Azolla

From Open Source Ecology
Jump to: navigation, search
An example of co-culture of Azolla and duckweed: "Azolla filiculoides and L.minor" by Mygaia at English Wikipedia (T.M.McKenzie)
"Red duckweed? (it is Azolla!)" (photo by Flickr user Hans Splinter, taken in the Netherlands.)

What is it?

"Azolla filiculoides" is a small fern that floats on water and is thus similar to the more familiar duckweed. It is native to North, Central and South America. Given appropriate nutrient and other conditions, Azolla can grow rapidly. It is rich in protein and minerals and can be used as animal fodder or for human consumption. While Azolla is not itself a nitrogen-fixing organism, it lives in symbiosis with certain cyanobacteria such as (Anabaena azollae) that fix nitrogen. Azolla may grow on somewhat brackish water, which expands the number of possible locations and uses.

Growth Characteristics

  • "200 g per square meter" per day - [1]
  • Dry weight percent - 5% - [2]
  • Optimum temperature range for Azolla growth has been shown to be between 18 and 28°C, although this is very much dependent on species, and optimal temperature as high as 33°C have been noted with some strains (see this paper for details.
"Azolla as chicken food." (image from ‎Youtube video: "Azolla is an excellent food supplement for backyard poultry. It is easy to grow and practically free of cost. It helps keep feathers shiny and improves their digestion. It is cooling and keeps their bones strong. This is a nice backyard type of business activity to generate employment and income for small and marginal farmers, housewives, unemployed youth, bored teenagers, enterprising people as well as organic farmers, health fanatics etc." )

Uses and Product Ecology

  • animal fodder: cows, chickens, fish, pigs, goats, etc.
  • for human consumption: salad; powder
  • source of nitrogen fertilizer (was widely used as N-source in rice cultivation in China during last 1000y)
  • for biogas and biodiesel (see below)
  • use of effluent from biogas digester to fertilize Azolla
  • wastewater treatment
  • initial soil biomining for nutrients: phosphorus and potassium from subsoil / mud, for subsequent use in agriculture
  • Product Ecology: Integrate with Aquaponics system (e.g. Tilapia): grow azolla on wastewater
  • Product Ecology: Ferrocement as pond lining (expensive but durable)
  • Product Ecology: Lactofermentation/(silage) when longer-term storage is required
  • Product Ecology: press to extract oil

Broader Implications

The cultivation of azolla and duckweed as "base crops" has some important implications. Equipment can be entirely different than in conventional agriculture. It would include pumps to move nutrients around, as well as small solar-driven miniature boats for continuous harvesting. This would eliminate the need for liquid fuels (for tractors). Solar power could gain a more important role. This may even include solar thermal power for pumps (using the expansion of air to move water).

Azolla Biodiesel

Because of its high oil content, Azolla may be a potential feedstock for biodiesel production. A recent open access paper analyzed the: "Lipid Yield and Composition of Azolla filiculoides and the Implications for Biodiesel Production". Another publication: "Biodiesel Production from Azolla filiculoides".

Besides biodiesel, other paths to bio-energy exist, such as Hydrothermal liquefaction for conversion to a crude-oil like liquid.

Azolla as the better microalgae farming

There has been long-standing hype about microalgae farming. In the 1950s, Chlorella was supposed to be the next thing that would solve all food and health problems. We have talked quite a bit here at OSE about Spirulina, but it requires highly alkaline water and needs specific chemical inputs ($) while Azolla grows on fish pond wastewater, compost leachate, silage leachate, etc.

Other microalgal organisms in this field besides Spirulina (which is the most widely cultivated one with an established market) are Chlorella (popular in Asia), Dunaliella (thrives in salty water), Haematococcus (for astaxanthin pigment), Schizochytrium (for DHA), Aphanizomenon, Botryococcus braunii (biofuel), Nannochloropsis (biofuel and omega-3). Being microalgae, these are all more difficult to harvest than larger organisms. Azolla is very easy to harvest. Azolla exists in symbiosis with the microalga Anabaena. So there we have it, our microalgae, just better.

Videos

Organizations

  • Azolla Foundation - [3]
  • Garden Pool Group sells it - [4]
  • Azolla Consortium - [5]

Sources

  • Biologic Performance - $15 - [6]
  • Pond Megastore - $10 - [7]
  • Loch Ness Water Gardens - $7 - [8]
  • Ponds, Plants, and More - $5 - [9]
  • Pond Plants Online - [10]
  • Pond Plants R Us - [11]

Links