Seaweed for cows? Researcher says oceans may provide plentiful livestock feed
LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — It is a long way between prairie ranchland where cattle graze and ocean waters where seaweed blooms, but Canadian scientists want to study whether red algae can one day be used as a sustainable livestock feed.
A paper published in the journal Nature Communications earlier this year determined how exactly the human gut breaks down dietary fibres in a tasty dulse-like variety of seaweed.
Scientists worked with the Canadian Light Source at the University of Saskatchewan — a research centre that uses a light a million times brighter than the sun — to examine four enzymes that digest the seaweed sugars.
Wade Abbott, a research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s Lethbridge Research and Development Centre, said future study will aim to confirm whether the intestines of cows and other animals can convert algae into energy, too.


