Biotechnology - Chuo City, Tōkyō-to, Japan
"Zero-Waste Nutrient Cycling in 1 Week"Insect technology firm, MUSCA, has selectively bred houseflies for almost 50 years over 1200 generations. MUSCA rears thoroughbred housefly larvae as insect-protein feed, while utilizing their energy to convert biomass into organic fertilizer in a one-week-cycle. A pioneer of housefly-farming in the emerging insect technology industry, MUSCA solves two essential problems in today's agriculture, with biomass solution and alternative-protein within a single supply chain. With further products and services on the horizon, MUSCA presents a sustainable platform for a circular economy, towards a cleaner planet with durable food security for generations to come.--MUSCA owns houseflies that have been selectively bred over 1200 generations for half a century. Utilizing this army of elite-thoroughbred houseflies, MUSCA developed a hyper-efficient biomass-recycling system that requires only a week for conversion, drastically shortening composting time-lengths compared to traditional practices. The thoroughbred-housefly larvae, which MUSCA rears as natural animal protein feed, consume biowaste including livestock waste as its natural diet, converting it to excrement which is used as fertilizer. MUSCA Feed has high functionality, such as increased disease resistance, and promotion of body mass increase, as identified through scientific research at partner universities. MUSCA Fertilizer has superior qualities compared to conventional fermented fertilizer, such as heightened bacterial resistance, as identified through scientific research at partner universities. With the promise to address both current biowaste pollution issues and future protein food security concerns within a single supply system, MUSCA aims to fast-track to commercialization on an industrial scale as early as possible.--#biotech #agriculture #circulareconomy #wastemanagement #agtech #aquaculture #foodtech #animal feed #alternativeprotein
reCAPTCHA
Gmail
Google Font API
Google Tag Manager
Google Maps