Quo vadis - development of a novel peatland-based recirculating aquaculture mutli-trophic pond system (RAMPS) in the Irish midlands with a global orientation.
Date
2024-05-03Author
O'Neill, Emer A.
Stejskal, Vlastimil
Paolacci, Simona
Jansen, Marcel A.K.
Rowan, Neil J.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Development of peatland-based, recirculating freshwater aquaculture that is efficient and economically viable
presents considerable benefits for society including supporting communities transitioning to low-carbon economies.
This case study constitutes the first peatland-based process that uses fish cultivation waste to produce
duckweed and microalgae biomass which are potential sources of high-value proteins, bioactives and further
products that can be extracted using a biorefinery approach. The novel site has successfully supported freshwater
aquaculture production using an effective circularity model and highlighted the potential of supporting new
innovation such as biorefining bioactives from some 2000 indigenous peatland microalgae species for potentially
beneficial health and adjacent applications. Additionally, it has demonstrated the appropriateness of digital
transformation such as connecting on site monitoring with living-laboratory analysis. This paper details the
challenges of food security given the impact of climate variance on open ecosystem performance. The findings of
this case study inform key strategic polices governing food sustainability, bioeconomy and climate action from a
bottom-up perspective. Key technical bottlenecks are discussed. Future research will consider efficiencies in
biomass production and value-streams for new business innovations, including use of appropriate digital technologies
though integrated multi-actor HUB framework enabling precision paludiculture for end-to-end monitoring,
sustainable products/services and bespoke training
The following license files are associated with this item: