An article from Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)

This young Nile tilapia can grow big on fermented rapeseed meal from biodiesel production, if the scientists from the Aquaculture Protein Center succeed. (Photo: Håkon Sparre, UMB)

From biodiesel by-product to tilapia farming

Large amounts of rapeseed from the production of biodiesel can be used in feed for Nile tilapia, one of the most important fish species in global aquaculture.

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Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)

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The world needs food and the world needs energy.

"That is why it is so exciting to upgrade by-products from biodiesel, in this case rapeseed meal, to a better protein source for fish," says Trond Storebakken.

He is professor at the Aquaculture Protein Centre (APC), a Norwegian Centre of Excellence that is affiliated with the Norwegian University of Life Science (UMB).

Rapeseed for fish

PhD student Youling Gao flankert by his supervisors. From right: Professor Trond Storebakken (APC/UMB), Professor Margareth Øverland (APC/UMB), and reserach scientist Jon Fredrik Hanssen (UMB). (Photo: Olav Fjeld Kraugerud, UMB)

The Chinese PhD student Youling Gao recently proved that high amounts of rapeseed meal can be used efficiently in feed for tilapia.

"We observed fast growth, efficient feed utilisation, and found no health problems," says Storebakken.

The access to protein rich rapeseed meal will increase as the demand for rapeseed oil for biofuel increases.

The disadvantage with rapeseed meal from biofuel production is that unwanted substances called glucosinolates are concentrated in the meal.

These substances are natural pesticides for the plant and prevents the rapeseed against being eaten by insects. They’re not poisonous in themselves, but are transformed to toxins by an enzyme in the rapeseed when the plant is damaged or attacked by insects. The same type of enzymes can be activated when rapeseeds are processed into feed.

Once rid of these glucosinolates, rapeseed meal will be an even better protein source for farmed fish. Recently APC tried to destroy the glucosinolates by subjecting rapeseed meal to solid-state fermentation. In the trials preformed by APC it was difficult to obtain stable conditions during fermentation, but the tilapia grew better on fermented rapeseed meal, than on untreated rapeseed meal.

The rumen is the solution

Scientists from APC therefore move on to find out how to efficiently utilise rapeseed meal from the production of biodiesel in feed for tilapia, with the help of fermentation. Ruminants have an effective way of getting rid of glucosinolates, by letting microbes in the rumen ferment the feed.

"Inspired by what’s going on in the rumen, we’re now trying out wet fermentation with two different cultures of microbes. While the first culture of microbes shall remove the fibre network that protects the glucosinolates, the next will destroy them once released," says Olav Fjeld Kraugerud, postdoctor at APC.

The conditions at the lab are naturally not identical to the rumen, but the main principles are the same.

Back to biodiesel

Rapeseed is the most important protein producing plant on world basis next to soy. But the utilisation of this plant to other animals than ruminants is limited because of glucosinolates and phytic acid. These are the substances APC wants to remove.

" With the large interest we’re seeing on using the oil from rapeseeds to produce biodiesel, the protein is left over and we have to utilise it for food," says Storebakken.

Nile tilapia is a very important fish for farming in the Southeast Asia and South America, but its origin is Africa. Norwegian research institutions have been crucial to facilitate the production of tilapia, as the food research institute Nofima was a central developer of a selective breeding program for tilapia.

APC use tilapia in nutritional research, where they work on different aspects of feed and feeding of tilapia.

"Today, tilapia from this breeding program are extremely fast growing, and they efficiently utilise feed based on inexpensive plant ingredients. That’s why we want to utilise the inexpensive rapeseed meal from biodiesel production, that is not suitable for direct human consumption, in feed for exactly this species," says Storebakken.

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