Guidini Lopes, Ivã
- Sao Paulo State University
Research article2021Peer reviewed
Lopes, Iva Guidini; Braos, Lucas Boscov; Pessoa Cruz, Mara Cristina; Vidotti, Rose Meire
Aquaculture production has been exponentially growing worldwide, which reflects in the generation of increasing amounts of waste materials. When poorly managed or disposed inadequately, aquaculture-derived wastes can compose social, economic and environmental issues. In this study, windrow composting was evaluated as a means of increasing the activity's sustainability through waste management, aiming to demonstrate a way of achieving circularity. For this purpose, four fish waste-based composts produced in an aquaculture research center were chemically evaluated and tested as soil amendment. The results indicated that harnessing wastes from aquaculture production is a valid and simple path to achieve circularity, as it is possible to convert waste into valuable, nutrient-rich composts that can be reintroduced in new productive processes, such as agriculture, in replacement of chemical fertilizers.
Fish waste; Soil fertility; Circular economy; Sustainability; Crop; Agriculture
Aquaculture
2021, volume: 531, article number: 735859
Agricultural Science
Fish and Aquacultural Science
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/127553