In south india I know it is there popular from 1999 - 2000 about 22 years but it is genetically optimized verient and in Cambodia the country farmers feeding it to ducks for very long time even centuries
Hello. I'm planning to start mass production of Azola and it's sub products in Turkiye. But I need more technical knowledge. How can you help please Regards
Azolla production is higher than in Duckweed, in Duckweed in Chile, Brazil, we can produce at least 400 tons/hectare/year. In Azola in Brazil, we can produce from 400 to 600 tonnes/hectare/year.
Brother you are saying 400tons per hectare . Don't you feel it is too exaggerated. If Know please explain . If you can do so lots of thanks from India.
I think he means on fresh weight culture, azolla fresh weight yield around 1200tons/ha/year and dry weight around 3% of FW so 35-45 is not exagerated number
@Vietbui which nutrition you mean? On the water/fertilizer or on azolla? On water most important are phosphor and potash, tiny bit of urea fertz. On azolla need continuous proximate analysis, but it will be in the range.
This azolla is wildly grown and people doesn't do anything with it ..thy consider this as unwanted grass. If anybody have anymore information and how to make into something productive it will really help the people
It's definitely not unwanted grass. Azollas and other duckweeds, they're the best supplements for animals, it's a gift by nature for us farmers. Cheers
1 hectare of azolla, under ideal conditions, can produce 35 to 40 tons of dried azolla per year. What more with rock dust powders and purified iron ore dust powders is something that must be tested, for according to one Planktos scientist, 1 kilogram of water soluble iron powder can produce 100,000 kilograms of phytoplankton in the sea. What about aquatic edible plants like azolla and others needs to be tested.
@@kabruzoeldanto8671 One can obtain on an average, 1 kg of fresh Azolla per day from the size of 4 feet x 6 feet pond. Harvested Azolla can be fed directly or mixed with nutrients and fed to livestock. Depending on the VARIETY of azolla you use, the highest yield of dried azolla per year is 168.98 metric tons under IDEAL CONDITIONS. You must take in and calculate in the external variables that affects the internal variables (the water conditions, plant nutrients conditions, and what-have-you. The 35 to 40 tons of dried azolla per year is under normal conditions only.
@@darthvader5300 Wow, I have been looking for this information! I can't thank you enough for sharing! What type of azolla would you recommend for cold winters (-1c) and very hot summers (+45c)?
When i search online, I find that no research is really done into if the plant is edible for humans, it is used as fodder for animals but that seems to be about it.
@@greenghost6416 thats very wasteful as we lose energy along the way unless your talking about cows that can make unedible things edible, in that case feed it grass. And they are much better ways to use this as a feedstock as to increase fat content which is lacking using things like crickets, but America is going to have to get over their stigmas, and as a food supplier we have to change the way certain foods are viewed if we want o be sustainable, but for the moment its more profitable to use as fish feed the next step may be protein powder
There is alot of fearmongering surrounding this plant and something like bmma that is ubitiquos in nature is being used to scare people, also since the research is lacking its probably one of the best times to invest, as this is a widely unknown plant to most and lets say in apocalypse survival scenario this would be the plant you would survive off of.
Very similar azzola is faster and doesn't need nitrogen but duckweed is more tolerant of higher nitrates, that would be the trade off but they are both very good duckweed is high in b12 and grows quickly to remove nitrates from waste water, while azzola is better at phosphorus removal and is phosphorus is its preferred fertilizer.
I think you need to give more details about your process. In what conditions do you keep the plant before feeding it to livestock? Maybe mold developed on the feedstock?
@@iknowyouwanttofly yea its actually not a bad way for the plant to get phosphorus as fish only excrete ammonia and nutrients which is utilized quickly, make sure you don't mix the two as the fish will eat the roots of the plant and harm its growth unless you have a barrier between them that allows water exchange while protecting the roots
Or... creating a low/no light environment allowing low light life species of micro and macro organism so flurish and thrive that lives under the surface. 😊
@@VinylUnboxings it be better to grow algae in aquariums due to the ability to access more light, azzola does better in shallow containers that are non transparent
awesome video about azolla... thank you for sharing. hope you continue to make videos like this..cheers!
In south india I know it is there popular from 1999 - 2000 about 22 years but it is genetically optimized verient and in Cambodia the country farmers feeding it to ducks for very long time even centuries
Hello.
I'm planning to start mass production of Azola and it's sub products in Turkiye. But I need more technical knowledge.
How can you help please
Regards
Kudossss❤
The great azola....
How can spores be taken from Azolla and extracted?
Super
this was 5 years ago, what breakthrough are currently there
Comparisons to Spirulina, other nitrogen fixing algae?
Azolla production is higher than in Duckweed, in Duckweed in Chile, Brazil, we can produce at least 400 tons/hectare/year. In Azola in Brazil, we can produce from 400 to 600 tonnes/hectare/year.
Can we use azolla as 100% feeds for chicken
@@paolotalento4547 yes
Brother you are saying 400tons per hectare . Don't you feel it is too exaggerated. If Know please explain . If you can do so lots of thanks from India.
I think he means on fresh weight culture, azolla fresh weight yield around 1200tons/ha/year and dry weight around 3% of FW so 35-45 is not exagerated number
@Vietbui which nutrition you mean? On the water/fertilizer or on azolla? On water most important are phosphor and potash, tiny bit of urea fertz. On azolla need continuous proximate analysis, but it will be in the range.
waow
This azolla is wildly grown and people doesn't do anything with it ..thy consider this as unwanted grass. If anybody have anymore information and how to make into something productive it will really help the people
It is used in northern Syria as animal feed and it was really effective and useful
People don't realize the potiential
It's definitely not unwanted grass. Azollas and other duckweeds, they're the best supplements for animals, it's a gift by nature for us farmers. Cheers
Wonderful presentation
It's amazing how scientists can take something so simple and make it so complicated. But idiots think they are wise.
We will teach them how to breed. REALLYYYYYYYYYYYYYY
Can we work with you on this venture. We have tissue culture facility and ready to heat the road running.
1 hectare of azolla, under ideal conditions, can produce 35 to 40 tons of dried azolla per year. What more with rock dust powders and purified iron ore dust powders is something that must be tested, for according to one Planktos scientist, 1 kilogram of water soluble iron powder can produce 100,000 kilograms of phytoplankton in the sea. What about aquatic edible plants like azolla and others needs to be tested.
Is this 40 tons of dried azolla per year pey hectare?
@@kabruzoeldanto8671 One can obtain on an average, 1 kg of fresh Azolla per day from the size of 4 feet x 6 feet pond. Harvested Azolla can be fed directly or mixed with nutrients and fed to livestock. Depending on the VARIETY of azolla you use, the highest yield of dried azolla per year is 168.98 metric tons under IDEAL CONDITIONS. You must take in and calculate in the external variables that affects the internal variables (the water conditions, plant nutrients conditions, and what-have-you. The 35 to 40 tons of dried azolla per year is under normal conditions only.
@@darthvader5300 Wow, I have been looking for this information! I can't thank you enough for sharing! What type of azolla would you recommend for cold winters (-1c) and very hot summers (+45c)?
Hi sir how to buy azolla in Pakistan
When i search online, I find that no research is really done into if the plant is edible for humans, it is used as fodder for animals but that seems to be about it.
I'm thinking it wouldn't be too bad in a smoothie
feed it to animals and eat animals.
@@greenghost6416 thats very wasteful as we lose energy along the way unless your talking about cows that can make unedible things edible, in that case feed it grass. And they are much better ways to use this as a feedstock as to increase fat content which is lacking using things like crickets, but America is going to have to get over their stigmas, and as a food supplier we have to change the way certain foods are viewed if we want o be sustainable, but for the moment its more profitable to use as fish feed the next step may be protein powder
There is alot of fearmongering surrounding this plant and something like bmma that is ubitiquos in nature is being used to scare people, also since the research is lacking its probably one of the best times to invest, as this is a widely unknown plant to most and lets say in apocalypse survival scenario this would be the plant you would survive off of.
@@greenghost6416 what a chad
compare with Lemna Minor which one is better?
Very similar azzola is faster and doesn't need nitrogen but duckweed is more tolerant of higher nitrates, that would be the trade off but they are both very good duckweed is high in b12 and grows quickly to remove nitrates from waste water, while azzola is better at phosphorus removal and is phosphorus is its preferred fertilizer.
Would Azolla be considered invasive in natural water ways?
yes
Absolutely yes!
Only stagnant water with some shade.
Mt Si at 19s 👀
I am from India
Je peux avoir des connaissances avec vous,je fase embryonnaire
Then what causes Azolla death like we see in the Philippines whereabouts it is uset as animal feed? WHy does it turn black and die?
I think you need to give more details about your process.
In what conditions do you keep the plant before feeding it to livestock?
Maybe mold developed on the feedstock?
Not black, mostly red first than black. Its phosphorous defficiency.
Could aquaponic fish be used to make phosfor for the azula?!?
@@iknowyouwanttofly yea its actually not a bad way for the plant to get phosphorus as fish only excrete ammonia and nutrients which is utilized quickly, make sure you don't mix the two as the fish will eat the roots of the plant and harm its growth unless you have a barrier between them that allows water exchange while protecting the roots
So it covers the surface not allowing light to enter the water and destroying water life that lives under the surface
Or... creating a low/no light environment allowing low light life species of micro and macro organism so flurish and thrive that lives under the surface. 😊
How can azolla be grown in inland regions? In aquariums?
Yea, or more shallow containers
@@VinylUnboxings it be better to grow algae in aquariums due to the ability to access more light, azzola does better in shallow containers that are non transparent
@@BossOfAllTrades so it can be incorporated with closed off anaerobic fermentation (such as bokashi), thus much less environmental foot print?
ZINDABAD ZINDABAD
2:07 liar
Hi
Because in india people don't know about the Azolla.
They are using too much space.
I want azolla, wolffia, dackweet, can give me?
No go buy it yourself.
No give u beggar
I feel you I found all three of those in a lake so be my guest to go and grab some