Singapore-based insect producer, Protenga, is one of the registrants of the challenge with a sustainable palatability solution based on black soldier fly larvae as the primary raw material source.
The company recently launched an innovative shrimp hatchery feed and has several innovations in the pipeline that will radically change the way shrimp hatchery production is approached.
Two new diets will be developed for European seabass and gilthead seabream based on four new hydrolysates produced in Portugal.
Symrise Aqua Feed has registered to the F3 Krill Replacement Challenge with a palatability enhancer resulting from applying its process technology to land-based byproducts.
The Climate Index, an annual overview of the climate impact of Norway's 100 largest companies, positioned Skretting among Norway's top nine performers.
Stratium produces a nutrient-rich protein meal derived from black soldier fly larvae at its facility in Buffalo, New York, and is one of the registrants of the challenge.
Increasing pulse and legume cropping in arable rotations to 20% across the UK, the project aims to bring about a reduction of 1.5Mt CO₂e per annum.
Malaysia-based company, JF Nutritech, aims to replace krill meal with a patented 100% natural specialty lipid formula.
Singapore-based insect producer, Entobel, is one of the registrants of the F3 Challenge aiming to replace krill meal with insect meal.
One of the registrants of the current challenge is Finland-based eniferBio which developed a mycoprotein for animal feeds.
A feasibility study found that the ingredient had a comparable nutritional profile with soy and fishmeal.
Aquasoja developed a functional finishing feed to enhance the natural skin colors of seabream and increase its value on the market.
Canadian researchers aim to expand the use of canola meal for livestock, poultry and fish.
Decamp will serve as the business development director for health products and will lead the R&D team.
The model is an open platform that brings together key stakeholders of the industry, from farmers to hatcheries and suppliers of equipment and services.
Researchers said that insect meal could be considered as a complementary ingredient to enhance soybean meal utilization in aquafeeds.
The company partnered with Thai Sustainable Fisheries Roundtable to elevate the Gulf of Thailand fisheries to international standards.
The company appointed Lucky Seven Aqua as its distributor for shrimp feed in Puttalam District, Sri Lanka.
“Without sustainable aquafeeds, there is no sustainable aquaculture seafood,” Blake Stok, director of sustainability, Thai Union North America, told Aquafeed.com in a recent interview discussing the company's new sustainability plan.
A new approach to growing algae in Scotland could offer a sustainable boost for the aquaculture industry by providing locally sourced, alternative protein for aquafeeds.