For aquaculture operations, feed inputs are a biosecurity and performance decision, not just a cost line. Spirulina destined for aquafeed should be held to a clear quality standard, because variability in pigment content or contaminant load translates directly into inconsistent animal outcomes.
A buyer's quality checklist
- Pigment consistency: Lot-to-lot phycocyanin and carotenoid content should be specified and reproducible, since this drives the pigmentation result.
- Contaminant control: Heavy metals, microbial load, and toxin screening should be documented per lot to protect animal health and downstream food safety.
- Cultivation transparency: Knowing whether material is open-pond or controlled-cultivation, and where, supports traceability claims that buyers increasingly require.
- Processing integrity: Drying and storage conditions determine how much pigment activity survives to the feed mill.
Why documentation is the differentiator
Two spirulina lots can look similar on a spec sheet and perform differently in the pond. Comprehensive certificates of analysis, consistent sourcing, and clear traceability are what let a feed formulator reproduce results season after season.
Forward-looking note: SPIRUVA is in a pre-launch phase, with commercial production scheduled for July 2027. This article describes general quality principles rather than product-specific performance.
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About the Author
Spiruva Research Team
Industry Intelligence Desk
Spiruva's editorial team includes co-founders and industry researchers covering the global phycocyanin and spirulina markets. We publish data-driven articles that help B2B buyers make better procurement decisions.