Earth Food Spirulina Book
Earth Food Spirulina Book
Earth Food Spirulina Book
The Complete Guide To A Powerful New Food That Can Help Rebuild Our Health and Restore Our Environment
Robert Henrikson
Once a food of the future, now millions of health conscious people around the world are enjoying this powerful food packed with unusual phytonutrients, antioxidants and functional nutrients with proven health benefits. This 3.6 billion year old algae designed by nature can help restore our personal and planetary health.
Super Health programs using this green superfood. New scientific discoveries revealing medical benefits.
With over 160 photos, graphs and tables, this book covers:
Robert Henrikson has been instrumental in developing spirulina as a world food resource for 22 years. He is President of a major algae food company and a director of the worlds largest spirulina farm. He has been eating close to ten grams a day of this green food for over 19 years, about as long as anyone.
How it is ecologically grown, delivering more nutrition per acre than any other food. Growing spirulina in developing world villages and harvesting from lakes.
How spirulina uses land and water more efficiently than other food crops. What super spirulina and phytochemical extracts to expect in the near future.
Schemes and dreams using microalgae to restore and regreen our planet.
How this remarkable blue-green algae can transform your health and our planet.
Robert Henrikson
How this remarkable blue-green algae can transform your health and our planet.
Robert Henrikson
This book is a reference guide to microalgae. It is intended to be solely educational and informational. It is not intended to sell any particular product. It is not intended as medical advice or as a guide to self-treatment nor is it intended to substitute for any treatment prescribed by a physician. People with medical questions should consult their doctor or health professional.
Notice
Acknowledgements
I wish to express my appreciation for the dedicated people who have pursued the dream of personal and planetary transformation by developing spirulina and other microalgae. I would like to thank Larry Switzer, David Donnelley, Shigekuni Kawamura, Alan Jassby, Robert Bellows, Takemitsu Takahashi, Hidenori Shimamatsu, Terry Cohen, Bill Lackey, Yoshimichi Ota, Amha Belay, Juan Chavez, Ron Henson, Ernest Thomas, Paul Schofield, Mark Belock and many other people who have contributed. For their special assistance in editing this manuscript, I wish to thank my brothers John Henrikson, Richard Henrikson and Jack Wight, and for assistance in revising this edition, Rodney Ruppert and Chris Yoro.
Sunset over the worlds largest spirulina farm, Earthrise Farms in the sunny California desert.
Table of Contents
Foreword..................................................................................... 2 Invocation................................................................................... 3 Introduction.............................................................................. 5
1. Rediscovery 2. A nutrient
rich super food.................................... 25 for super health 3. Self-care programs with........................................ 43 clean green energy 4. New research. ............................................................ 61 reveals health benefits 5. The variety of products......................................... 81 around the world 6. How spirulina is. ...................................................... 99 ecologically grown 7. Spirulinas resource advantages. ...................... 117 and world food politics 8. Spirulina in............................................................... 131 the developing world 9. Microalgaes role in. ............................................. 145 restoring our planet Procession............................................................................... 155 Appendix A Quality and Safety Standards. .......... 157 Appendix B The Origins of Earthrise...................... 167 Bibliography and References...................................... 175
1
This book completes another step in the realization of a shared vision quest. Robert and I have been Brothers of a Great Dream for more than fifteen years. It is a dream no one owns but all can share if they have the imagination and faith to rise to its promise, to know that it can and must come true. It is a Great Dream because we intuit that it is also the dream of the spirit that creates our destiny the spirit of this living world. Our instincts tell us that this living world is not only the home of life, but is itself a gigantic, self-evolving organism some have called Gaia. She too has embarked upon a four billion year vision quest: to fill herself with conscious life. We humans are an essential player in her Great Dream. In our awakening to her reality, we sense that she too is further awakening. Somehow Gaia herself is coming to fuller consciousness of her embryos of awareness called humans. Such is the true position of humanity awakening to the full miracle of its most ancient and living parent, this living, conscious Earth. If we fully accept the fact of her miracle, the fulfillment of her vision quest becomes ours. Our awakening invites us to care for our most ancient and sacred parent by co-creating upon her and with her. We are coming to realize that we can no more ravage and destroy her and survive than a foolish child can ravage and destroy its own mother. She asks us to honor her by honoring each other and the preciousness of life itself. And if we respond to her, we can be certain that she in turn will continue to be generous with us and with our far descendants. We can awake to the startling good news that we can live and thrive within her miraculous being, that we can enjoy a sustainable sanity, peace, and abundance which until now has only been glimpsed by visionaries. This is how her vision quest is fulfilled in our awakening. I honor this book because I know it was created in the service of her spirit. It reveals and explains one of the vital gifts the parent Earth offers its awakening child humanity. Larry Switzer, May 1989.
Robert Henrikson and Larry Switzer.
Foreword
Invocation
Spirulina speaks to the human species, on behalf of the first species algae.
For a billion years we filled the Earths atmosphere with enough oxygen so new lifeforms could evolve. We observed and participated in the unfolding of the diverse lifeforms on this planet for billions of years more. Paradise unfolded and we loved it. Just moments ago, your species appeared. In the past 50 years, you humans have been shutting down the life support systems of our planet. Your unusual ability to upset the biosphere, deplete the ozone layer, increase global warming, deforest the land, expand deserts and pollute land, water and air has aroused our attention. We do not depend on your gratitude for having provided you a beautiful planet, but a little cooperation is in order. Your planetary plundering destroys the opportunity for life to unfold fully in all its forms. If you persist, your species will likely perish too. We algae will survive, and over the eons will again foster new life. We do recognize, however, your unique destiny on this planet. You are the most immature, yet the most intriguing of all species. The future of planetary evolution rests with you. Your survival and evolution require healing our planet in the next 20 years. Heal yourself within, heal your relationships with your own species, and heal our planet. From this great challenge will emerge your highest creativity. Taking this evolutionary jump, you will begin some very interesting things here, and we want to participate in them with you. We offer our wisdom for your personal and planetary health. Embrace, befriend and learn from us. Rediscover the ancient wisdom of you biological ancestors.
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Introduction
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Food choices for health restoration
Introduction
Antibiotics are no longer effective against new resistant bacteria. The End of Antibiotics (Newsweek March 28, 1994) claimed the rise of drug resistant germs is unparalleled in recorded biologic history. Over prescription of antibiotics in the last 40 years has accelerated the mutation of resistant bacteria. People taking medications and antibiotics are more vulnerable. Antibiotics kill beneficial flora in the intestines, making room for infection by drug resistant bacteria. Much more infectious mutant retro viruses than AIDS are coming. The Danger Zone (May 4, 1994) broadcast by CBS 48 Hours and new books like The Coming Plague newly emerging diseases in a world out of balance warn about these deadly viruses. The sensational movie Outbreak (1995) used a mutant airborne ebola virus to scare us. Hantavirus carried by rats and new viruses emerging from the tropical rainforests are examples of infectious airborne viruses. Although this situation seems pretty grim, there is good news. A remarkable paradigm shift is already underway. In animal nutrition, as antibiotics are becoming ineffective, scientists are replacing them with probiotics, special therapeutic foods that boost the immune system and resistance to disease. In human medical research, scientists are rushing to identify probiotic foods that enhance our immune system. Researchers are scouring the globe for diverse new foods and plants for cancer preventing compounds. The goal of the National Cancer Institute Experimental Food Program is to study, assess and develop experimental, or designer foods, rich in disease and cancer preventing substances. Theres a revolution in health: Weve been hearing about antioxidants, nutraceuticals, and designer foods loaded with functional nutrients: the leading edge of nutritional research in the 1990s. Another Newsweek story (April 25, 1994) proclaimed: Better than Vitamins: can phytochemicals prevent cancer? The article extolled remarkable compounds in whole foods that can prevent disease, even better than isolated vitamins and nutrients. Probiotics, nutraceuticals, phytochemicals, designer foods where do we start? With the original food designed by nature spirulina! To raise your energetic frequency, bring this light food into your life.
7
1. Does our food restore our personal health? Many foods we eat are toxic to long term health. They lead to cancer, heart and degenerative disease, immune breakdown and chronic lethargy. The introduction of genetically modified organisms into the food system adds unknown health risks. Two-thirds of all deaths in the USA are attributed to diet. 2. Does our food restore our human species? Much of the global food production and distribution system creates hunger in a world of abundance. Two-thirds of humanity live in poverty and scarcity. Over 40,000 children die of malnutrition and related diseases every day. 3. Does our food restore our planetary ecosystem and its remarkable biodiversity? About three-quarters of all fertile land in the temperate and tropic zones is devoted to agriculture. Our world economy depletes fertile soil, wastes fresh water, pollutes the environment, kills other living species, turns rainforest into desert, cropland into wasteland. The unsustainable way we produce our food may represent the greatest threat to the health of our biosphere.
This inefficient expropriation of resources increases scarcity, poverty and suffering for two-thirds of the worlds people. Agribusiness desertifies the planet, eliminates biodiversity, pushes global warming and steals resources from future generations. Environmental stress accelerates the breakdown of Earths ecosystems. These systems cannot adjust as quickly to the changes humans have recently introduced. Great bodies of water are dying from pollution. Forests around the world are dying as if they were suffering from some immune system collapse. Neither can human bodies quickly adjust to these rapid changes. Increased ultraviolet radiation from the depletion of the ozone layer causes skin cancer, cataracts and suppression of our immune system. Simultaneously, immune system diseases like AIDS have appeared.
6
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
The perfect food to restore our health and our planet
Introduction
Cultivation of grains and development of irrigation took thousands of years. Soybeans, a newcomer, took 50 years to emerge from obscurity. The last 20 years progress in algae technology is astounding. The first chapter (1) looks at the role of algae in history and the implications from its productivity. How can spirulina transform your personal health? (2) Its nutritional attributes are described and compared with other foods. (3) A review of personal self care programs shows how to use and benefit from this superfood. (4) The extensive clinical research suggests spirulina is a probiotic and therapeutic food. What is the role of spirulina in global economics and politics? (5) The variety of products around the world is probably more than you realize. (6) Ecological technology is used to cultivate spirulina, and future growing systems will produce exciting new products. (7) A critical look shows the resource advantages of spirulina production. How can spirulina help restore our planet? (8) Farms large and small are blossoming in the developing world. (9) Looking to the future, spirulina and other algae are featured in projects to restore and regreen the face of our planet. Just as our body is composed of billions of cells working together as a single being, billions of lifeforms on Earth are working together as one living organism. By adopting ecological food choices for restoring our own health, we help restore humanity and our planet. Algae harvests sunlight. It transforms light to living matter more efficiently than other plants. Eat the light in spirulina and bring light into your own cells. Eat lighter, eat less. Raise your energy to embrace the pace of change in this age of transformation. Consume less, live lighter on the Earth. Participate in the unfolding story of earth consciousness rising. The oldest organisms the ones who gave us life are back. They represent some of the many solutions for restoring our planet in the next 20 years. Perhaps for this reason algae have arrived in our consciousness.
The first photosynthetic lifeform was designed by nature 3.6 billion years ago. Blue-green algae, cyanobacteria, is the evolutionary bridge between bacteria and green plants. It contained within it everything life needed to evolve. This immortal plant has renewed itself for billions of years, and has presented itself to us in the last 20 years. Spirulina has 3.6 billion years of evolutionary wisdom coded in its DNA. Does spirulina contain antioxidants? Yes. Is it a probiotic food? You bet! Is it a nutraceutical? That too. Is it loaded with phytochemicals? All kinds. It contains compounds like phycocyanin, polysaccharides, and sulfolipids that enhance the immune system. This superfood has the most remarkable concentration of functional nutrients ever known in any food, plant, grain or herb. On top of this, spirulina delivers more nutrition per acre than any other food on the planet. This has extraordinary implications for more efficient and less damaging food production for the future. Each day new research brings to light the wonders (hidden) in microscopic algae. In 1989, the National Cancer Institute announced sulfolipids extracted from blue-green algae were remarkably active against the AIDS virus in test tube experiments. Sulfolipids can prevent viruses from either attaching to or penetrating into cells, thus preventing viral infection. Research published from 1991-99 has shown phycocyanin and polysaccharide extracts of spirulina increase macrophage production, bone marrow reproduction, strengthen the immune system and disease resistance in fish, mice, chickens, cats and human cells. Algae is in its infancy as a food, medicine and biochemical resource. Spirulina, a descendant of Earths first photosynthetic life form, was rediscovered about 35 years ago. Just 20 years ago, it burst into public awareness as a powerful new food with a promise as a food source to help feed the worlds people. This magnificent idea caught our imagination. Compared to the five billion years of Earth history, or to the millions of years of humanity, or to the thousands of years of human food development, 20 years is only an instant in time.
8
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Chapter 1
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
When life began on Earth, the carbon dioxide level in our atmosphere was probably 100 times greater than it is today. Life began in a greenhouse atmosphere, and microalgae played the central role in transforming this inhospitable planet into the beauty and richness that makes up life today. How this occurred is particularly relevant in view of our concern with global warming. Scientists believe the Earth formed 4.5 billion years ago, and the first lifeforms appeared 3.6 billion years ago. There is considerable controversy about how life was actually created on this planet. One theory, growing in support over the past decade, asserts the Earth is a self-regulating, living organism, actively maintained by lifeforms on its surface. In The Ages of Gaia, James Lovelock offers an intriguing description of how lifeforms on the planets surface modified and regulated the atmospheric gas composition as life evolved. Because the young sun was 25% cooler at the beginning of life, the greenhouse effect kept a cooler planet warmer. Earths nitrogen atmosphere, without any oxygen, was rich in greenhouse gases (like carbon dioxide and methane) absorbing and trapping radiant heat, with the infrared radiation rising from the surface. The oceans were filled with iron, sulfur and other compounds in solution because there was no free oxygen. These substances reacted with and removed oxygen, so the Earth had a great capacity to prevent the appearance of free oxygen.1 The first living bacteria, the procaryotes, consumed chemical nutrients as food, but some adapted the energy of the sun to make their own food. The first photosynthesizing procaryotes, called cyanobacteria or blue-green algae, used light energy to break apart the abundant carbon dioxide and water molecules into carbon food compounds, releasing free oxygen. Fossils dating back 3.6 billion years, show filaments of these single cells stacked end on end. The shape unmistakably resembles spirulina.
1.2. Drawing of a 3.6 billion year old cyanobacteria fossil.
Views of spirulina under the microscope. Iron and sulfur compounds in the oceans mopped up almost all of the free oxygen immediately. Methanogen bacteria consumed decomposed algae and converted the carbon in it to methane gas and carbon dioxide, compensating for the removal of carbon dioxide by photosynthesizing algae. Lovelock describes the planet during this period as a brownish red hazy planet, with a layer of methane smog in the atmosphere, offering similar protection as the ozone layer today. The cyanobacteria colonized the oceans and formed a thin film on the land masses.2 These blue-green algae carried their genetic information in DNA strands in the cell membrane and could exchange information by exchanging plasmids with another. In this way, the organism became essentially immortal. The Earths operating system was populated totally by bacteria. It was a long period when the living constituents of Gaia could be truly considered a single tissue. Bacteria can readily exchange information, as messages encoded on low molecular weight chains of nucleic acids called plasmids. All life on Earth was then linked by a slow but precise communication network.3 Over a billion years passed. When the oxygen absorbing compounds in the oceans were used up, the atmospheric concentration of oxygen increased rapidly. Methanogen bacteria retreated into the only environments devoid of oxygen beneath the sea floor, in marshes, and in the guts of other organisms.
13
12
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
About 2.3 billion years ago, a new period began when oxygen may have reached a 1% level, and methane, a greenhouse gas, disappeared from the atmosphere, cooling the planet.4 Cells with nuclei appeared. This more powerful and complicated lifeform was supported by the higher oxygen concentration. These eukaryotes, such as microscopic green algae, may have formed from communities of individual bacteria living within an outer membrane of one of them. The nucleus contained organelles such as chloroplasts, the green bodies which photosynthesize. Because each organelle carried different genetic codes, the loss of information of one of them could mean the death of the cell. To overcome this possibility of death, sex evolved as a way to transfer information between cells.5 About 600 million years ago, Earth entered the present phase with the evolution of large plants and animals. The power requirements of larger organisms like trees and dinosaurs needed a higher oxygen concentration, which increased and remained steady at 21%. For hundreds of millions of years, the Earths biosystem has kept the oxygen level carefully balanced between 15%, where higher life 1.6. Chlorella, green microalgae with forms cannot survive, and 25%, nucleus and strong cell walls. where forests would spontaneously combust in a global fire. The procaryotes, cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae, still cover the land and water surfaces, part of the living mechanism for regulating the planets biosphere. Our rediscovery and interest in this original lifeform is no accident. It represents our need to return to the origins of life to understand and heal our planet. Realizing that algae took billions of years to build and maintain the atmosphere, it is remarkable that humanity has raised the carbon dioxide concentration over 25% in merely one hundred years.
14
15
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Some blue-green algae can fix atmospheric nitrogen into organic forms. This is very important because organic nitrogen is essential for building proteins and amino acid complexes in plants and animals. Although nitrogen gas comprises 78% of the atmosphere, it is not usable by most plants and animals. For more productive crops, nitrogen must be added to soils. Organic nitrogen can only come from adding chemical fertilizers, from existing microbial mineralization of organic matter, by nitrogen-fixing bacteria in legume roots, or by nitrogen-fixing blue-green algae. Because of this ability to fix nitrogen, blue-green algae is often the first lifeform to colonize a desolate land area in deserts, in volcanic rocks, on coral reefs, and even in polar regions, working with lichen to fix nitrogen to the rocks to begin life in the tundra.7 Nitrogen-fixing blue-green algae are being developed as natural biofertilizers, but they are not always safe to eat. Many kinds of microcystis, anabaena and aphanizomenon are toxic just like some mushrooms and land plants. Harvesting wild blue green algae from lakes presents a risk of contamination by algal toxins. Spirulina, whose scientific name is arthrospira, is an edible, non-nitrogen fixing blue-green algae. with a long history of safe human consumption and over 30 years of safety testing. It meets all international food quality and safety standards. Specially designed farms where spirulina is cultivated under controlled conditions, do not allow the growth of other contaminant blue-green algae, as in lakes and waterways. Microalgae have kept a rather low profile, but their interaction with humans is notable on several occasions. The Bible describes when the Israelites were starving in the wilderness, God provided manna a flake-like thing, lying on the ground. They gathered the manna and baked it into bread. Some believe the manna was a kind of lichen a combination of fungus and blue-green algae that formed a crust on the rocks and ground.8 Another story took place a thousand years ago in Vietnam. A monk named Khong Minh Khong discovered rice was far more productive when a water fern, azolla, was planted in the paddies. The grateful farmers built temples to him after he died, but kept it secret.
16
1.7. Locations of traditional human consumption of freshwater microalgae, excluding ocean seaweeds (courtesy Alan Jassby).
In 1940, a little known journal published a report by French phycologist Dangeard on a material called dih, eaten by the Kanembu people near Lake Chad. Dih is hardened cakes of sun-dried bluegreen algae collected from the shores of small ponds around Lake Chad. Dangeard also heard this same algae populated a number of lakes in the Rift Valley of East Africa, and was the main food for the flamingos living around those lakes. His report went unnoticed.
17
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Twenty five years later, a Belgian Trans-Saharan expedition discovered a blue-green material covering the waters around the shores of Lake Chad. A botanist with the expedition, Leonard, came across curious blue-green cakes in native markets of Fort Lamy (now Ndjemena) in Chad. When locals said these cakes came from areas near Lake Chad, Leonard recognized the connection between the algal blooms and dried cakes sold in the market.
1.10. Kanembu women gathering spirulina from area around Lake Chad. Drawing in Human Nature, March 1978 (article by Peter T. Furst). 1.8. Collecting spirulina from a lake in Chad (photo by J. Maley). 1.9. Spirulina cakes (dih) on sale in a local market in Chad (photo by J. Maley).
Desert winds pushed the mats of algae to the shores. Kanembu people collected the wet algae in clay pots, drained out the water through bags of cloth and spread out the algae in the sand to dry in the sun. When dry, women cut the algae cakes into small squares for sale in the local market. Dih is crumbled and mixed with a sauce of tomatoes and peppers, and poured over millet, beans, fish or meat. It is eaten by the Kanembu in 70% of their meals. Pregnant women eat dih cakes directly because they believe its dark color will screen their unborn baby from the eyes of sorcerers.12 Spirulina is also applied externally as a poultice for treating certain diseases.
18 19
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
At the same time, a company director in Mexico read about spirulina and realized it was the same algae clogging the soda extraction plant on Lake Texcoco. Although spirulina was not then eaten as a food in Mexico, an historical literature search revealed it was harvested, dried, and sold for human consumption 400 years earlier, at the time of the Spanish conquest. Spanish chroniclers described fisherman with fine nets collecting this blue colored techuitlatl from the lagoons, as seen in Figure 1-10, and making bread or cheese from it. Other legends say Aztec messenger runners took spirulina on their marathons. Techuitlatl was mentioned by naturalists until the end of the 16th century, but not after that. Probably, it disappeared soon after the Spanish conquest. The great lakes in the Valley of Mexico were drained to make way for the new civilization. The only remnant today, Lake Texcoco, still has an living algae culture.
1.11. Aztecs harvesting bluegreen algae from lakes in the Valley of Mexico. Drawing in Human Nature, March 1978. (article by Peter T. Furst).
Lakes Bodou and Rombou in Chad have a stable monoculture of spirulina dating back centuries. It is a major species in Kenyas lakes Nakuru and Elementeita and Ethiopias lakes Aranguadi and Kilotes. The lesser flamingo evolved a filter in its beak to eat spirulina. Millions of flamingos feed entirely on algae when it is abundant.
20
21
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Spirulina thrives in alkaline lakes where it is difficult or impossible for other microorganisms to survive. Because the bacteria level in alkaline water is quite low, the bacteria count in spirulina, harvested and dried without further processing, is insignificant.13 Algae pioneers have dreamed of harvesting from these lakes to feed the millions of nearby hungry people now suffering from chronic hunger. In natural lakes, the limited supply of nutrients usually regulates growth cycles. New nutrients come from either an upwelling from inside the earth, when rains wash soils into the lakes, or from pollution. The algae population grows rapidly, reaches a maximum density, and then dies off when nutrients are exhausted. A new seasonal cycle begins when decomposed algae release their nutrients or when more nutrients flow into the lake
step in agriculture Over thousands of years, humans have dramatically increased food productivity, at progressively greater environmental costs. Domesticating plants and animals encouraged the first permanent human settlements. About 7000 years ago, irrigation brought water to the land and subsequent food surpluses supported the first great river valley civilizations. Thousands of years later, when the land salted up from over-irrigation, these civilizations vanished. A thousand years ago, the invention of an efficient plough in Europe allowed easier tilling of the soil. Europeans cut down the vast original forests bringing new areas under cultivation and new prosperity to the continent. The 19th century industrial revolution introduced mechanized agriculture, climaxing in the so-called Green Revolution exported from the United States in the 1960s and 1970s. Modern agriculture has boosted short term productivity by using seed hybrids and massive fertilizer, pesticide, water and energy inputs. Productivity has been achieved by simply ignoring many hidden costs, such as the consumption of non-renewable fossil fuels for fertilizers and machinery, pollution of soil and water through excessive use of chemical fertilizers, and depletion of soils. This ecological damage will be paid by future generations.
22
food productivity can be increased simultaneously with a new technology. This is a choice that man has never had before. The rediscovery of this ancient life as a human food has great implications for us all, now and in the 21st century. It is an example of the myriad of unexpected and astounding solutions to basic world problems that are now beginning to appear together on this planet.
23
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Chapter 2
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Concentrated green super food Early research documented spirulinas safe consumption by traditional peoples. When scientists discovered that spirulina grew so fast, yielding 20 times more protein per acre than soybeans, they named it a food of the future. Spirulina is the best vegetable protein source, with a protein content of 65%, higher than any other natural food. Yet, an even greater value is found in its concentration of vitamins, minerals and other unusual nutrients. Three to ten grams a day delivers impressive amounts of beta carotene, vitamin B-12 and B complex, iron, essential trace minerals, and gamma-linolenic acid. Beyond vitamins and minerals, spirulina is rich in phytonutrients and functional nutrients that demonstrate a positive effect on health. For undernourished people in the developing world, spirulina brings quick recovery from malnutrition. In Western overfed food culture loaded with unhealthy and depleted foods, spirulina can renourish our bodies and renew our health. It is legally approved as a food or food supplement in Europe, Japan and many other countries around the globe. The United States Food and Drug Administration confirmed in 1981 that spirulina is a source of protein and contains various vitamins and minerals and may be legally marketed as a food supplement.1 Many countries have set up food quality and safety standards for spirulina. Nutritional depletion of modern foods Todays food is lower in essential nutrients than foods produced only 50 years ago. Farming practices have depleted our soils of minerals. Microorganisms in the soil contributing the valuable mineral content are declining because the overuse of chemical fertilizers destroys these microorganisms. Agribusiness chooses hybrid strains based on harvestability, appearance, and storageability, rather than nutrient content. Furthermore, the long shipping and storage time between harvest and selling reduces nutrient content. At the same time, researchers say increased stress from environmental pollutants and lifestyle demands have increased our dietary requirements for certain essential nutrients.2 As a result, many of us do not trust the quality of our foods. Twenty years ago only health food consumers used nutritional supplements. Today, at least some supplements are used by almost everyone.
26
Beyond isolated vitamins and minerals Vitamins and minerals in foods are bound to natural food complexes with proteins, carbohydrates and lipids. The human body recognizes this entire food complex as food. Most supplements, however, are synthetic combinations of isolated USP vitamins and minerals. These are often formulated to claim 100% of the Daily Value (DV) on labels. But these vitamins and minerals are not bound to anything, and may have an entirely different chemical structure than those found in foods. Formulas may ignore antagonistic and synergistic effects of vitamins and minerals both in regard to absorption and metabolic reactions once absorbed. Complex factors in whole foods that aid absorption, such as chelating agents, may be missing in laboratory formulated vitamins and minerals. It is well known that many supplements, especially calcium and iron, are not well absorbed. Supplement megadoses were attempts to overcome absorption problems with an approach that more is better. Unfortunately, this may not be true. Absorption of vitamins and minerals is limited by uptake mechanisms in the intestines, and megadoses are largely excreted. Some say megadosing is more than a waste of money, it is unwise. If the body relies on formulated supplements, it might get lazy or forget to extract nutrients from foods efficiently. Next, clever technicians invented chemical chelators, transporters and time release agents to make mineral supplements better absorbed. In other attempts, vitamins and minerals have been extracted from some food sources. These concentrates may have toxic residues if chemical solvents are used to remove them. Recently touted are food-form type supplements. In this case, USP vitamins and minerals are recombined in a vat with yeast bacteria. It is claimed these products are just like food. Most people believe it is better to get nutrients from natural foods. Since many conventional foods are nutrient depleted, more people are taking spirulina and other green superfoods. These whole foods offer functional nutrients and phytochemicals, new frontiers for disease prevention research, way beyond isolated vitamin and mineral supplements.
27
EARTH FOOD
The building blocks of life are protein and amino acids. When comparing protein sources, several criteria should be considered: protein quantity, amino acid quality, usable protein, digestibility, and the negative side effects from fat, calorie and cholesterol content. Protein: Spirulina has the highest protein of any natural food (65%); far more than animal and fish flesh (15-25%), soybeans (35%), dried milk (35%), peanuts (25%), eggs (12%), grains (8-14%) or whole milk (3%).
% total
per 10 grams
470 430 610 60 910 320 100 270 320 300
% total
7.6 % 6.9 % 9.8 % 1.0 % 14.6 % 5.2 % 1.6 % 4.3 % 5.2 % 4.8 %
6200
mg
100.0 %
Amino Acid Quality: Protein is composed of amino acids. Essential amino acids cannot be manufactured in the body and must be supplied in the diet. Non-essential amino acids are needed too, but the body can synthesize them. Essential amino acids, plus sufficient nitrogen in foods, are needed to synthesize the non-essential amino acids. A protein is considered complete if it has all the essential amino acids. Spirulina is just that, a complete protein. The body requires amino acids in specific proportions. If a food is low in one or more amino acids, those amino acids are called limiting amino acids, and the body cannot use all the amino acids completely. The most ideal proportion of amino acids is found in eggs. All other foods have some limiting amino acids.
28
Limiting amino acids in spirulina are methionine and cystine, but it is still higher in these amino acids than grains, seeds, vegetables and legumes, and higher in lysine than all vegetables except legumes. Spirulina complements vegetable protein and increases the amino acid quality if eaten within several hours of other foods. Over 100% of the daily essential amino acid requirements for a typical adult male are supplied by using only 36 grams of spirulina, about 4 heaping tablespoons (2.4). Feeding tests rank proteins by Net Protein Utilization (NPU) value, determined by amino acid quality, digestibility (proportion absorbed by the intestines) and biological value (proportion retained by the body). Dried eggs (94) have the highest value, followed by milk (70-82), fish (80) and meat (67). Spirulina (62) is similar to grains and has a higher NPU than nuts (2.5).
29
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
2.4.
EAA
Isoleucine Leucine Lysine Methionineb Phenylalaninec Threonine Valine
spirulina gm / 10g
0.35 0.54 0.29 0.20 0.58 0.32 0.40
spirulina %/ 10g
42 % 48 % 35 % 29 % 52 % 43 % 41 %
a. Jassby 1983, FNB 1975, Earthrise Farms 1995. b. includes cystine. c. includes tyrosine.
2.5. Protein quantity and quality for spirulina and other protein food sources a
Spirulinab Dried eggs, whole Brewers yeast Soy flour, whole Dried milk, skim Cheese, parmesan Wheat germ Peanuts Chicken c Fish c Beef c Sesame seed Oats, whole flour Wheat, whole flourc Tofu, moist Brown rice
Usable Protein %
40 44 23 23 30 25 18 10 16 18 15 11 10 9 5 5
a. Switzer, The Whole Food Revolution, 1982, pg 21. b. value for spirulina NPU from O. Ciferri, Spirulina. c. values are for highest protein levels for these groups.
30
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Vitamins - protectors of health A ten gram spirulina serving (20 tablets, or 1/3 ounce) supplies a rich profile of vitamins we need.
2.6.
Vitamins a
per 10 grams
23000 IU 0 mg 1.0 IU 200 mcg 0.35 mg 0.40 mg 1.40 mg 80 mcg 1 mcg 20 mcg 0.5 mcg 10 mcg 6.4 mg
U.S. DV
5000 IU 60 mg 30 IU 80 mcg 1.5 mg 1.7 mg 20 mg 2 mg 0.4 mg 6 mcg 0.3 mg 10 mg ***
% DV
460 % 0% 3% 250 % 23 % 23 % 7% 4% 0% 330 % 0% 1%
Vitamin A (beta carotene) Vitamin C Vitamin E (a-tocopherol) Vitamin K Vitamin BI (thiamin) Vitamin B2 (riboflavin) Vitamin B3 (niacin) Vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) Folate (folic acid) Vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) Biotin Panthothenic Acid Inositol
a. Earthrise Farms 1995.
Food
spirulinab papaya sweet potato collard greens carrots chard beet greens spinach cantaloupe chlorellac broccoli butternut squash watermelon peach apricot
IU of beta carotene
23000 8867 8500 7917 7250 6042 6042 6000 5667 5000 3229 1333 1173 1042 892
***
Spirulina is the richest food in beta carotene, ten times more concentrated than carrots. Ten grams provide a remarkable 23,000 IU (14 mg) of beta carotene, 460% of the U.S. Daily Value (DV) of Vitamin A. High doses of Vitamin A may be toxic, but beta carotene in spirulina and vegetables is safe, because human bodies convert beta carotene to Vitamin A only as needed. Vitamin A is important in maintaining mucous membranes and pigments necessary for vision. Vitamin A deficiency is one of the most serious malnutrition diseases in the developing world, leading to blindness. Beta carotene has therapeutic effects, including reducing serum cholesterol and ever present cancer risks. Over the past 12 years, cancer health authorities have published dozens of studies showing beta carotene reduces the risks of all kinds of cancers, including lung, throat, stomach, colon, gastrointestinal tract, breast and cervix.
32
a. Vegetarian Times, Recipes with A+ Nutrition, May 1986, pg 47. b. Earthrise Farms, 1995. c. Yaeyama Chlorella, 1995.
Although beta carotene is best known, spirulina contains an antioxidant rich complex of at least ten carotenoids. These mixed carotenes and xanthophylls function at different sites in the body and work synergistically with the other essential vitamins, Vitamin E, minerals and phytonutrients in spirulina. This is more effective than an isolated, synthetic beta carotene supplement. Even if you dont eat the recommended 4 to 9 servings of fruits and vegetables every day (most people eat only 1 to 2 including french fries), get your natural carotenoid antioxidant protection from spirulina tablets or powder every day.
33
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Vitamin B-12 and B-complex vitamins
Spirulina is the richest source of B-12, higher than beef liver, chlorella or sea vegetables. B-12 is necessary for development of red blood cells, especially in the bone marrow and nervous system. Although primary B-12 deficiencies, pernicious anemia and nerve degeneration, are quite rare, because B-12 is the most difficult vitamin to get from plant sources, vegetarians have taken to spirulina. Ten grams contain 20 mcg of Vitamin B-12, 330% DV, using the approved microbiological assay. Vitamin B-12 label content claims for foods and dietary supplements are based on the approved microbiological assay. This method is used for spirulina, because it is being compared with the B-12 content of other foods and vitamins. An alternative method developed in the 1980s, radioassay, has measured the B-12 assumed to be bioavailable to humans. Radioassay found higher levels of B-12 analogs and lower levels of bioavailable B-12 in all foods and supplements, and shows spirulina has only 20% of the original B-12. Even using these lower levels, it is the best nonanimal source of Vitamin B-12. Some incomplete research has suggested B-12 analogs could block B-12 absorption, based on limited results with very few individuals, and did not consider B-12 non-absorption due to folic acid or other dietary deficiency. In nearly 20 years, there have been no complaints of a vitamin B-12 deficiency from spirulina consumers, including children and vegetarians. One tablespoon provides significant quantities of thiamin (23% DV), required for functioning of nerve tissues, riboflavin (23% DV), needed to gain energy from carbohydrates and proteins, and niacin (7% DV) needed for healthy tissue cells. Spirulina is a richer source of these vitamins than common whole grains, fruits and vegetables and some seeds. Other B vitamins, B-6, niacin, biotin, panthothenic acid, folic acid, inositol and Vitamin E are also present in smaller amounts.
Mineralsa
U.S. DV
% U.S. DV
7% 55 % 8% 10 % 2% 14 % 6% 25 % 21 % 4% 4% -
Calcium Iron Phosphorus Magnesium Zinc Selenium Copper Manganese Chromium Sodium Potassium Germanium
70 mg 1000 mg 10 mg 18 mg 80 mg 1000 mg 40 mg 400 mg 300 mcg 15 mg 10 mcg 70 mcg 120 mcg 2 mg 500 mcg 2 mg 25 mcg 120 mcg 90 mg 2400 mg 140 mg 3500 mg 60 mcg -
Iron is the most common mineral deficiency worldwide, especially for women, children and older people. Women on weight loss diets typically do not get enough iron, and can become anemic. Iron is essential for strong red blood cells and a healthy immune system. Spirulina is a rich iron food, 10 times higher than common iron foods. Ten grams supply up to 10 mg of iron, 55% of the Recommended Daily Value. Spirulina iron is easily absorbed by the human body. It is theorized that its blue pigment, phycocyanin, forms soluble complexes with iron and other minerals during digestion making iron more bioavailable. Hence, iron in spirulina is over twice as absorbable as the form of iron found in vegetables and most meats.6
34
35
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Typical iron supplements are not well absorbed. Studies show iron in spirulina is 60% better absorbed than iron supplements such as iron sulfate. For this research refer to Chapter 4. For all people who need iron supplements, spirulina is one of the best sources.
2.9.
Food Spirulinab Chlorella c Chicken liver, cooked Crab, pieces, steamed Beef liver, fried Soybeans, boiled Blackstrap molasses Spinach, cooked Beef, sirloin, broiled Potato, baked Scallops, steamed Pistachios, dried Broccoli, cooked Cashews, dry-roasted Turkey, dark meat Spinach, raw chopped
serving size 1 tbsp. (10g) 1 tbsp. (10g) 3 ounces 1/2 cup 1/2 cup 1/2 cup 1 tbsp. 1/2 cup 3 ounces one 3 ounces 1/4 cup 1 spear 1/4 cup 3 ounces 1/2 cup
mg Iron 10.0 10.0 7.2 6.0 5.3 4.4 3.2 3.2 2.9 2.8 2.5 2.2 2.1 2.1 2.0 0.8
mg per 10 grams
1 mg 244 mg 33 mg 2 mg 8 mg 12 mg 97 mg 135 mg 14 mg 546 mg
% total
0.2 % 45.0 % 5.6 % 0.3 % 1.4 % 2.2 % 17.9 % 24.9 % 2.5 % 100 %
a. The Complete Book of Vitamins and Minerals for Health, pg. 182. b. Earthrise Farms, 1995. c. Yaeyama Chlorella, 1995.
Spirulina is a concentrated calcium food, supplying more, gram for gram, than milk. Ten grams supply 7% DV for calcium. Calcium is important for bones and neural transmissions to the muscles. Deficiencies can lead to osteoporosis in older women. Ten grams supply 10% DV for magnesium, one of the most concentrated magnesium foods. Magnesium facilitates absorption of calcium and helps regulate blood pressure. Spirulina is low in iodine and sodium, and is no problem for those on salt-restricted diets. Humans need dozens of essential trace minerals for the functioning of enzyme systems and many other physiological functions. Deficiency of trace minerals in the typical diet are thought to be widespread. Ten grams supply manganese (25% DV), chromium (21% DV), selenium (14% DV), copper (6% DV) and zinc (2% DV).
36
The only other known sources of dietary GLA are mothers milk and oil extracts of evening primrose, black currant and borage seeds. Spirulina is a concentrated source of GLA, and a 10 gram serving has 135 mg. As a comparison, a daily dose of 500 mg of evening primrose oil has 45 mg. GLA comprises about 20 to 25% of the lipid fraction of spirulina, compared to only 9% for evening primrose oil.
2.11.
Food sources
Mothers milk Spirulina
Oil extracts
37
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina Phytonutrients
2.12.
These functional nutrients have no published Recommended Daily Value, but are known to benefit health. They include glycolipids, polysaccharides, pigments and other growth factors. Pigments help synthesize many enzymes necessary for regulating the bodys metabolism. Spirulinas very dark color comes from these natural pigments which harvest different wave lengths of sunlight. The most important pigment in spirulina, this protein complex is about 14% of the entire weight. Phycocyanin evolved a billion years before chlorophyll and may be the precursor to chlorophyll and hemoglobin. It has both magnesium and iron in its molecular formation, and therefore, phycocyanin may be the origin of life common to both plants and animals.12 Research shown in Chapter 4 suggests it stimulates the immune system. The common feature of green foods is their high chlorophyll content. Chlorophyll is known as a cleansing and detoxifying phytonutrient. Sometimes called green blood because it looks like the hemoglobin molecule in human blood. Chlorophyll has a magnesium ion at its core, giving it a green color, and hemoglobin has iron, giving it a red color.11 Spirulinas beneficial effect on anemia could be due to this similarity of chlorophyll and hemoglobin and its high bioavailable iron. Spirulina has 1% chlorophyll, one of natures highest levels, and has the highest chlorophyll-a level. Chlorella has 2 to 3%, mostly chlorophyll-b. About half of these yellow/orange pigments in spirulina are carotenes: Alpha, Beta and Gamma. About half are xanthophylls: Myxoxanthophyll, Zeaxanthin, Cryptoxanthin, Echinenone, Fucoxanthin, Violaxanthin and Astaxanthin. Total mixed carotenoids make up 0.37% of spirulina. Although beta carotene is best known, this mixed carotenoid complex functions at different sites in the body and works synergistically to enhance antioxidant protection.
38
per 10 grams
1400 mg 100 mg 37 20 17 3 17 7 6 1 1 2 mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg mg
% total
14 % 1.0 % 0.37 % 0.20 % 0.17 % 0.03 % 0.17 % 0.07 % 0.06 % 0.01 % 0.01 % 0.02 %
Phycocyanin (algae-blue)
Carotenoids (orange) Carotenes 54 % Beta carotene 45 % Other Carotenes 9 % Xanthophylls 46 % Myxoxanthophyll 19 % Zeaxanthin 16 % Cryptoxanthin 3 % Echinenone 2 % Other Xanthophylls 6 %
a. Earthrise Farms 1995.
Spirulina contains only 15 to 25% carbohydrate and sugar. The primary forms of carbohydrates are rhamnose and glycogen, two polysaccharides which are easily absorbed by the body with minimum insulin intervention. Spirulina offers quick energy, without taxing the pancreas or precipitating hypoglycemia.10 When the NCI announced that sulfolipids in blue-green algae were remarkably active against the AIDS virus, attention was focused on the sulfolipid containing glycolipids (see Chapter 4). The three classes of lipids in spirulina are called neutral lipids, glycolipids and phospholipids. Glycolipids are 40% of the lipids, and contain sulfolipids. Sulfolipids in spirulina range from 2-5% of the total lipids.8,9 Enzymes are catalysts for chemical changes. There are thousands of enzymes, each catalyzing specific reactions. Dried spirulina contains a number of enzymes. One is superoxide dismutase (SOD), important in quenching free radicals and in retarding aging. SOD enzyme activity ranging from 10,000 to 37,500 units per ten grams
39
Polysaccharides
Enzymes
EARTH FOOD
Algae and grasses are the foundation of life on Earth, harvesting sunlight. Their deep green color glows with the vitality from the rainbow of natural pigments which power, protect and cleanse them while they grow. These natural foods will nourish, energize and cleanse your body naturally. Eating just a little of these concentrated green foods every day will benefit your health. Eating lower on the food chain will benefit the health of our planet.
40
Today more people understand the need for green vegetables than 20 years ago. Even fast food restaurants have installed salad bars. At the same time, there is growing concern with the quality of foods and vegetables grown on mineral depleted soils. Green superfoods go beyond green vegetables because they are packed with beneficial nutrients. They go beyond isolated vitamin and mineral supplements, because as whole foods they are rich in functional nutrients and phytonutrients. Research reports link the phytonutrient, antioxidant and protective substances in plant foods with the prevention of degenerative diseases. This publicity has stimulated the greening of supplements with green superfoods. Nutrient dense green superfoods are often consumed as tablets or capsules or by mixing powder in drinks. These ideal fast foods pick up your energy, especially if you do not have time to eat the recommended 4 to 9 servings of fresh fruits and vegetables every day. Green superfood supplements have become increasingly popular in the last 15 years. Spirulina and chlorella are specially cultivated algae. Aphanizomenon flos-aquae (referred to as blue-green algae) is harvested from a lake in Oregon. Barley grass and wheat grass are two superfoods from cultivated young cereal plants, harvested before they become grains. All five chlorophyll-rich foods are specially harvested to maximize purity, potency and quality. How do they compare? Comparing price, aphanizomenon bluegreen algae is the most expensive, followed by chlorella. Spirulina powder and tablets are less expensive, and barley grass and wheat grass powder and tablets are the least costly. Comparing nutrients, data provided by manufacturers is shown on the next page for a 10 gram serving.
Vitamins (per 10 grams) Beta carotene 23000 IU Vitamin C 0 mg Vitamin E 1 IU Thiamin, B1 0.35 mg Riboflavin, B2 0.40 mg Niacin, B3 1.40 mg Vitamin B6 80 mcg Vitamin B12 20 mcg Folacin 1 mcg Biotin 0.5 mcg Pantothenic acid 10 mcg Inositol 6 mg Minerals (per 10 grams) Calcium 70 mg Iron 10 mg Magnesium 40 mg Sodium 90 mg Potassium 140 mg Phosphorus 90 mg Zinc 0.3 mg Manganese 0.5 mg Copper 120 mcg Chromium 25 mcg Phytonutrients (per 10 grams) Phycocyanin 1400 mg Chlorophyll 100 mg Total Carotenoids 37 mg Gamma Linolenic Acid 135 mg Glycolipids 200 mg Sulfolipids 10 mg
a. Earthrise Farms, 1995. b. Yaeyama Chlorella, 1995. c. Cell Tech, Alpha Sun. d. Cereal Grass, ed. by Ronald Seibold. * no data available.
41
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Chapter 3
Eat lighter as part of a natural weight control plan. Vegetable protein and B-12 for vegetarians. Reducing cholesterol and PMS. Ideal for fasting and for body cleansing programs. Energy and endurance for athletes and body builders. Easy-to-digest for older people on restricted diets. Anti-aging strategy. Great for children and mothers. The best storage and survival food.
43
EARTH FOOD
100% pure powder is a uniformly dark green or blue-green color and has no other colored particles. Your body feels energy within minutes because the powder is naturally digestible. It provides quick energy and nourishment between meals or in place of a meal. Some have asked whether you can take too much. It is a perfectly safe natural food. Some people take two tablespoons or more each day. The most popular way to enjoy it at home is to add it to your favorite fruit or vegetable juice in a blender. Start with one teaspoon (5 grams) and add flavors or spices to suit your taste. Later on you can increase the amount. Many regular users take one heaping tablespoon (10 grams) per drink. Try out our successful green smoothie recipes! Hand held micro mixers are handy for mixing powder directly in a glass of water or juice. Easier to clean up than a big blender. Micro mixers use two batteries, and you can carry one with you in a purse or briefcase. Now you can take powder on the road, use it at work, or even in a hotel room. No lon3.2. Author with a morning ger do these circumstances keep you from smoothie in a blender. your healthy green drink. Helpful hints: Dont stick a wet spoon in your spirulina bottle or put a spoonful directly into liquid. Water will stick the powder on your spoon. Add it to liquid slowly while stirring. Spirulina will keep well if handled properly. The dry powder absorbs water from the air if you leave it open, so keep the bottle tightly sealed when not in use. You dont need to refrigerate it, but keep in a cool, dry, dark place. Add a teaspoon to a tablespoon to dishes to enhance nutritional content. Its tasty in soups, salads, pasta, breads and taboulie. Even a little will give food a dark green color. With recipes that require cooking, heat spirulina as little as possible. Like many natural foods, heat can damage its sensitive nutrients. Creative recipes are found in Spirulina, The Whole Food Revolution by Larry Switzer1 and The Spirulina Cookbook by Sonia Beasley.2
44
An instant breakfast to start your day Blend 1 tablespoon spirulina in 2 cups of tropical blend juice (or orange, apple or pineapple juice). For options you can add one whole fruit (banana, orange or peach), almonds, sunflower seeds or even flavors such as vanilla or lime to suit your taste. (Mix well in a blender. Makes 2 servings). A mid afternoon vegetable pick up Blend one tablespoon spirulina in 2 cups of vegetable juice (or carrot or tomato juice). For options you can add whole vegetables, herbs (parsley, dill weed) or spices (cayenne, horseradish) to suit your taste. (Mix well in a blender. Makes 2 servings).
Morning Smoothie
Veggie Cocktail
Quality tablets can be made without sugar, starch, fillers, animal parts, preservatives, stabilizers, colors, coatings, and with only a minimum of vegetable tableting agents. Made in this way, the color of the tablet should be a uniform dark green without light colored spots or specks. Capsules should also be free of excess fillers or additives, and now, vegetable capsules are available. Many bottles provide nutritional information for a six tablet serving (3 grams), but you can take more if you like. Often, people take 10, 15 or 20 tablets or capsules a day. Twenty 500 mg tablets are equal to a heaping tablespoon of powder (10 grams). Tablets deliver the same benefits as powder, but digestion takes about an hour. For faster results, some people chew or dissolve the tablets in the mouth. Because it is a natural whole food, you can take tablets by themselves between meals. If you are using spirulina to balance your diet and help eat lighter meals, take tablets or capsules an hour before you eat. If there is a time of day when your energy runs low, take some tablets and see how your body feels one or two hours later. Both tablets and capsules are helpful with water after coffee or alcohol.
45
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Self-Care Programs
A more natural diet satisfies hunger because it satisfies the bodys real hunger for nutrition. Spirulina is a very concentrated natural food. As part of a wholesome natural food diet suggested in the following pages, it can help restore natural body weight. Many people use it along with a low carbohydrate diet and exercise to eat lighter meals and avoid fattening snacks. Take a heaping teaspoon of powder (about 5 grams), or at least 6 tablets one hour before meals or snack breaks. You know when youre going to be hungry, so plan ahead. Tablets take a little more time to be assimilated than the powder. This green superfood can help satisfy a bodys appetite. It is not an appetite suppressant in any way, and contains no drugs or chemicals that trick the body. It is simply concentrated, easily digested natural nutrition. Especially important to dieters, it is rich in iron, often found deficient in women on low calorie diets. One resource book written on this subject is The Spirulina Diet by Dr. Saundra Howard.3 At mealtimes, eat a balanced diet of natural foods, minimizing high calorie fat foods. Exercise daily to burn off calories and fat deposits, and to maintain a toned body. Your goal should be to lose weight slowly while you are reprogramming your eating habits. Both must happen together for long term success. This way you can graduate from the destructive cycles of food binging, crash diets and diet drugs. Because metabolism and biochemistry are different for each person, weight loss results may differ. Track your weight over several weeks. If you want to strengthen your program, increase the amount of spirulina slowly in order to eat lighter meals. It is important to eat regular nutritious meals. Slow but steady weight loss is desirable. Often dieters are able to stabilize their body weight at a more ideal lower level. Spirulina can help us remember the wisdom of a natural diet. Most of all, it helps us to lighten up, and provides the energy to make the switch from a bulky unhealthy diet to lighter, more powerful nutrient rich foods.
The following self-care programs show how people use spirulina to transform their health and vitality. Its best to examine your dietary habits and eliminate high fat, high meat, high sugar and junk food diets. You will notice spirulina is more effective as part of a lighter, fresher, more natural diet. These recommendations follow dietary programs advocated by leading medical experts for reducing weight, cholesterol and pre-menstrual stress, and for enjoying a longer, healthier life. Our modern diet is driven by the appetites generated by consumer advertising. Many people are sold on fast convenience foods usually rich in fats, carbohydrates and sugar, and low in natural vegetables and fiber. These foods typically increase body weight, raise cholesterol levels, and worsen digestive and colon problems in later years. We often eat food in the wrong combinations, or out of compulsion or nervousness, and do not heed our true appetite signals. Many conventionally grown and over-processed foods loaded with chemicals have low nutritional value, especially low in essential trace elements. The human digestive system, when overloaded with fatty non-nutritious foods, doesnt assimilate enough quality nutrients. Under these conditions, the body is continually starving for more nutrients, triggering appetite and compulsive overeating. Without exercise, extra calories stay on as fat. Overweight people often remain trapped in this cycle, a difficult one to break. Sudden weight loss with diet drugs or crash diets is very stressful and may have adverse side effects. Research shows common diet drugs containing phenylpropanalomine (PPA) may be addicting and have dangerous side effects on the kidneys and heart. Weight loss from drug diets is often temporary, and when the weight returns, the percentage of fat to body weight is higher than before dieting. This vicious cycle continues because the real problem is neglected improper diet and its accompanying reinforcing attitudes.
46
47
EARTH FOOD
Self-Care Programs
Three day suggested meal plan for a lighter, more natural diet
For a natural dietary program to lose weight, keep your total calories below 1100 calories per day with meals like those below. As much as possible use fresh, organically-grown produce to minimize intake of pesticides and herbicides. Breakfast: 1 egg, 1/2 broiled tomato with basil, 1 slice whole wheat toast, 1 pat butter, grain coffee or herbal tea.
Here are dietary suggestions to eat lighter, low-calorie foods, get plenty of exercise, and supplement your diet with spirulina for extra nutritional support. Add more of these fresh, natural, high fiber, low fat foods to your diet. They provide the nutrition you need. Prepare foods simply, without adding sugar and with a minimum of oil, butter and salt. Natural herbs and spices can enhance the flavor. Fresh fruits, vegetables and legumes contain natural vitamins and minerals. Canned or frozen foods are often loaded with sugar, salt and preservatives. Whole grain breads and cereals provide excellent nutrition and a source of natural fiber, important for digestion and regularity. Once you use whole grain foods, you may find white bread, polished rice and sugary cereals less appealing. Low-fat milk, yogurt, and cheeses have lower calories. Add fresh fruit to plain yogurt and cottage cheese, and avoid the excess sugar in flavored products. Use naturally aged cheese rather than processed cheese spreads. Fresh fish and fowl are good sources of lean protein. Look for chicken and turkey that is not grown on factory farms, where birds are pumped with antibiotics and drugs to prolong their lives in unhealthy conditions. Avoid toxic foods. Juices, herbal teas, mineral water and fresh water are healthy liquids. Use beverages made from natural ingredients free of added chemicals, flavors, colors, and sugars. Regular exercise is an important part of any weight loss program. Find several activities you enjoy regularly. It might be aerobics, tennis, jogging, swimming, bicycling or brisk walking. Drink lots of fresh clean water. Breathe deeply and oxygenate your entire body. Regular exercise will give you a more positive outlook towards life.
48
Day One
Lunch: (6-10 spirulina tablets 1 hour before) 1 small tossed green salad, 2 tbsp. lo-cal dressing, 4 oz. sauteed lean fresh fish, 1/2 cup fresh green beans, 1 tbsp. slivered almonds, herbal tea, mineral water. Dinner: 2 lean pieces tarragon chicken, 1/2 cup steamed brown rice, 1/2 cup steamed broccoli, herbal tea.
Breakfast: 1 cup oatmeal, 1/2 cup low-fat milk, 1 tbsp. raisins, 1 bran muffin, 1 pat butter, grain coffee or herbal tea.
Day Two
Lunch: (6-10 spirulina tablets 1 hour before) 3 oz. water-packed tuna sandwich on whole wheat with alfalfa sprouts, lettuce and tomato, 1 cup homemade minestrone soup, herbal tea or 6 oz. low-fat milk. Dinner: 1 green pepper stuffed with brown rice, 1 steamed ear of corn, 1/2 fresh apple, iced herbal tea, mineral water.
Breakfast: 6 oz. orange juice, 1 cup bran cereal, 1/2 cup low-fat milk, 1/2 sliced banana, wheat toast, 1 pat butter, grain coffee.
Day Three
Lunch: 1 cup gazpacho soup, 1 cup taboulie salad, 4 cherry tomatoes, 4 cucumber slices, celery sticks, iced herb tea.
Dinner: (6-10 spirulina tablets 1 hour before) 1 spinach salad, 2 tbsp. lo-cal dressing, 4 oz. baked red snapper with lemon and parsley, 1/2 cup steamed zucchini, 2 crackers, mineral water.
49
EARTH FOOD
Self-Care Programs
Once a month, millions of women experience the unpleasant and disruptive effects of their hormonal cycles. Studies show women with more severe PMS have unusually low levels of certain nutrients, so many health experts urge a nutritional approach. Three key factors increase the severity of PMS poor nutrition, lack of exercise and stress. By improving the quality of foods, eating less of certain foods, exercising regularly, and learning to reduce stress, women can feel better all month. Five steps can reduce the severity of PMS. Results are cumulative. Many of these recommendations are the same as those in the program for weight control and lowering cholesterol. 1. Enjoy fresh, natural foods.
Eat more fresh fish and poultry, whole grains, nuts, fresh fruits, vegetables. Drink plenty of water, herb teas and fruit juices. Prepare food simply, using a minimum of oil, butter, and salt.
Well-publicized medical studies show as cholesterol levels decline, risks of heart attacks and strokes decline as well. Over 70% of Americans now understand the need to reduce cholesterol-rich foods in their diet. These foods increase blood serum cholesterol which creates plaque and blocks the arteries, causing atherosclerosis leading to heart disease. More people are testing their cholesterol levels. Total cholesterol level above 200 mg/dl is considered risky, and above 240 is considered high risk. Below 200 is considered acceptable, but ideal may be 150 to 160. For specific cholesterol guidelines, consult a physician or health practitioner. Excessive cholesterol may require drug therapy. Spirulina is a helpful food for cholesterol reduction. Research in Japan with male volunteers shows only 4 grams of spirulina a day (about 8 tablets) significantly reduced cholesterol levels. Refer to Chapter 4 for details of this study. In any event, says Medical Self Care, The key to cholesterol reduction is diet. For most people, this involves only simple adjustments and solutions. Most people can lower cholesterol by 30 to 40 mg/dl within a few weeks by making basic dietary changes.4 Changes include: 1. Reduce saturated fat by eating less red meat, whole fat dairy products, commercial products with lard, coconut and palm oils and fried foods. Eat more fish, poultry, low-fat milk and cheese. 2. Reduce dietary cholesterol by eating fewer eggs, less organ meat, animal and dairy products. Eat more vegetables and fruits. 3. Eat more soluble fiber such as pectin in fruits and vegetables and guar gum in oats. 4. Eat more fish because omega-3 fatty acids in cold water fish are known to lower cholesterol. 5. Read food labels and avoid hydrogenated oils. 6. Exercise. 7. Control weight to decrease the risk of heart attack.
50
Cut down or avoid salt, sugar, white flour, convenience foods full of chemicals, dairy products and red meat, chocolate, soft drinks and coffee. Studies show women with PMS consume more of these foods than women who do not. Cigarettes and coffee can deplete your body of nutrients and aggravate PMS.
Many clinics recommend foods or supplements rich in B-complex, magnesium, zinc, beta carotene, GLA and other vitamins, minerals and herbs. By containing many of these nutrients, spirulina is useful in a PMS reducing plan, and several PMS supplements contain spirulina.
4. Exercise.
Vigorous activity will increase your blood flow, oxygenate tissues, and help lift depression and anxiety.
Stress makes PMS worse. Create a more relaxing environment. Learn to let go through muscle relaxation, talking to friends, or meditation.
51
EARTH FOOD
Self-Care Programs
Fasting one day a week is a common practice in traditional societies and in many religions. The purpose of going without solid food for three days to a week or longer is to allow the body to cleanse and renew itself. People who benefit from prolonged fasting report a feeling of detoxification which makes them feel physically stronger and psychologically clearer.7 One of the first discoveries was spirulinas value as an aid for fasting. It eases intestinal problems because it is easy to digest and provides energy and stamina for work and play during a fast. Because it is a light, low calorie food providing essential nutrients, and because it digests easily, spirulina makes fasting easier and more effective. A well known booklet on this subject is Rejuvenating the Body through Fasting with Spirulina Plankton by Dr. Christopher Hills. He writes: as a source of nutrition during fasting or dieting, it is excellent because it helps cleanse the intestinal tract as well as relax the smooth muscle of the bowels.8 Fasting with spirulina and mixing it with fruit and vegetable juices is the perfect and most natural way to flush out the system with liquids and chlorophyll without denying the body the nutrients for full and effective metabolism.9 Dr. Hills suggests a seven day fast with fruit, fruit juices, water and spirulina, without any other solid food. Fasting requires discipline and should be done for limited periods. Fasting should be accompanied with common sense, and when it is over, light simple meals should be phased in slowly over several days before moving back to a normal diet. The first few days of fasting may result in discomfort due to detoxification. If side effects become severe, fasting should be stopped. Fasting is not for everyone, and people with special dietary or medical problems should consult their health practitioner first.10
Scientific organizations such as the National Cancer Institute have published guidelines for lowering the risks of all kinds of cancers. Poor diet is associated with 35% of cancer deaths.5 High-fat, low-fiber diets greatly increase risks of prostate, colon, gland and breast cancer. Food recommendations, such as those mentioned already, include reducing fat consumption, reducing caloric intake to maintain desirable body weight, and eating lean meats, poultry, fish and low-fat dairy products, more fruits, vegetables, beans, peas and whole grain cereals and breads. Tobacco use is associated with 35% of cancer deaths, and should be avoided. Excessive alcohol consumption is associated with 3% of cancer deaths. Together with diet, reducing drugs like tobacco and alcohol significantly reduces cancer risks. About 27% of cancer deaths are not directly related to diet or drugs, but result from environmental, occupational or stress factors. Over the past two decades, well-publicized scientific studies have clearly shown that eating foods rich in beta carotene will lower the risks of all kinds of cancer. See a summary in Chapter 4. One of the most famous reports was published by The National Research Council in 1982. Diet, Nutrition and Cancer6 concluded that foods rich in beta carotene and Vitamin A reduce cancer risks. The study recommended two servings each day of vegetables rich in beta carotene such as carrots, sweet potatoes, green vegetables and squashes, and fruits such as papaya and cantaloupe. Unfortunately, many people do not eat these two vegetable servings each day, so over a dozen new studies are testing the beneficial effects of beta carotene supplements. Fortunately, spirulina is over ten times more concentrated in beta carotene than any other vegetable. Only three grams daily offers 140% of the US RDA of Vitamin A in the safe form of natural beta carotene. Plus, its entire carotenoid complex offers antioxidant protection at different sites in the body.
52
53
EARTH FOOD
Self-Care Programs
Athletes need extra nutrition. Because conventional foods no longer contain the nutrients they once had, concentrated superfoods have become popular. Taken before jogging or athletic competition, athletes say it delivers energy and improves stamina. It increases the endurance of marathon runners. Backpackers, cyclists and mountain climbers who carry all their food take tablets for more energy and stamina per weight than conventional foods. Spirulina is a high intensity food perfectly suited for high intensity training. It contains GLA which is known to stimulate prostaglandins, master hormones which regulate every cell of the body, including heart, skin, circulation and musculature. Correct prostaglandin levels are necessary for good health and performance.14 Proteins are essential for proper endurance training, and are needed to regenerate body tissue, providing the framework for muscles, tendons and blood hemoglobin. For the bodybuilder, spirulina offers 65% protein, easy to digest and low in fat. Bodybuilders take 10 grams up to three times a day. Before competition spirulina gives an energy boost with sustaining power, mixed with milk, egg, honey and juice. Taken before meals it can satisfy appetite and help reduce caloric intake, essential for maintaining competitive weight.15 World Class and Olympic athletes in China and Cuba use spirulina to improve performance. At the largest Chinese training center for over 2000 athletes, trainers report it improves recovery for all athletes and boosts the immune system. This allows these athletes to intensify training, something for which they are renown. The Cuban Ministry of Sports was given 1,600 bottles of spirulina before the 1996 Olympic games so athletes could intensify training. Cuban athletes, especially track stars, have consumed spirulina for many years. It helps create and mend muscle mass. In heavy training, fast burners have trouble retaining iron. Spirulina prevents anemia because it has ten times more iron than spinach. Some marathoners consume 8 grams daily for endurance and to ward off cramping. It helps eliminate carbon dioxide faster, so the muscles get oxygen faster. When training increases appetite, its nutrition helps curb hunger pangs.16
55
In the modern low-fiber diet, wastes (or mucoids) can accumulate in pockets in the colon. Never removed, these wastes can lead to constipation, weakened digestion, poor nutrient absorption, and in later life, colon cancer, one of the most common cancers today. These problems increase with age, as seniors will confirm. A complete plan for health through colon rejuvenation is found in The Colon Health Handbook, by Robert Gray. In the book, he describes yeast and spirulina as the only protein supplements that are not mucoid-forming in the intestines.11 Spirulina is described as a metabolic activator, which acts directly on the body tissues at the cellular level to promote increased activity to burn up mucoforming substances. Spirulina is very energizing, generally superior to all ginsengs, dong quai, bee pollen and vitamin B-15. The combination of spirulinas energizing and appetite suppressant properties has made it popular for use while fasting. It is an aggressive cleansing herb that empties toxins out of the body tissues into the lymph. Gray describes the value of lactobacillus. A healthy population of lactobacillus within the intestinal tract far outstrips all metabolic activators known to the author.12 In order for the counter-mucoid effect of dietary fiber to be significant, there first must be a good implantation of lactobacteria in the intestinal tract. The fiber then acts to keep the lactobacteria at a high level of activity and to avoid their extinction.13 Research in Japan has shown laboratory rats eating spirulina have higher levels of lactobacillus and B-vitamin absorption from the entire diet. For more on this study, see Chapter 4. Many older people suffer from chronic constipation, necessitating laxatives for symptomatic relief. Others face the prospect of colon cancer. In Brazil, people have used spirulina to relieve constipation. Many high income Brazilians, who eat excess beef with few vegetables and fiber, complain of constipation and take spirulina for its cleansing and normalizing effect.
54
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Self-Care Programs
Spirulina is a often thought of as a superfood for people in their 20s, 30s and 40s, to boost their high energy lifestyle. Not so in Japan, according to a 1988 customer survey.19 It reported 73% of spirulina customers are 50 years and older, and 57% of these people are women. Why? 45% say they are taking it for treatment of a specific problem. Another 28% take it to maintain their health and restore physical wellness, and 12% use it as a nutritional supplement. Of those taking it for treatment, 22% use it for blood sugar problems and diabetes, 15% for eye problems, and 14% to relieve constipation. Japanese seniors do not consider spirulina a short term fad. They are serious about maintaining long term health. and have lower medical bills than Americans. Typically, Japanese take 4 grams every day (equivalent to eight 500 mg tablets), and many use even more as part of their regular program for maintaining long term health. Because many older people dont eat enough, have restricted diets, or suffer from poor digestion, many have low energy and may be undernourished. Some seniors eat by themselves and dont make the effort to have nutritionally sound meals. Concentrated foods like spirulina are an excellent supplement: 60% protein, easy-to-digest, and known to assist recovery from malnutrition. All vegetable lowfat protein means seniors can lighten up on meat centered diets that aggravate arthritis and raise cholesterol. With the highest level of the protective anti-oxidant beta carotene, its good for eyes and vision. It builds healthy lactobacillus, aiding in assimilation and elimination. More older people desire to eat less meat, so its important to choose iron rich vegetable sources like spirulina. Vitamin B-12 absorption decreases with age, so B-12 rich spirulina is a sound choice. It contains the rare essential fatty acid GLA, essential nutrients for healthy skin. Gram-for-gram it has more calcium and magnesium than other foods. Calcium and magnesium supplements are recommended for mature women who may have lost calcium from their bone mass and suffer from osteoporosis. People over 50 in particular are likely to notice the benefits of eating a little every day.
56
57
EARTH FOOD
Self-Care Programs
Millions of people store several years of food for security in an uncertain world. Their concerns are earthquakes, environmental catastrophe, poisoning of land and water, nuclear accidents, food supply interruption or economic collapse. Natural foods are becoming more popular in reserves. Spirulina has always been popular with people who store food because it is concentrated, lightweight and portable perfect for an emergency food supply. Algae can supplement an existing food reserve. Its extra nutrition can turn a storage food diet from merely surviving to really thriving. Much less space is needed compared to bulky grains, and it is ideal for urban or suburban dwellers with limited space. In hard economic times, if paper currency were to become devalued, spirulina would hold its value for trade. It may even be better than gold, which you cant eat. Even for those who become temporarily unemployed or suffer loss of income, a green stash can always come in handy. For long term storage, keep it in airtight and watertight containers, without exposure to light or excessive heat. It is best to rotate these foods into the daily diet and replace with fresh stocks. Regular plastic jars may not protect against oxygen penetration which can destroy valuable beta carotene over time. Oxygen barrier plastic jars are available which will allow storage for several years. One company offers volume discounts. Cases of pound size jars allow daily use from one jar, while keeping the remaining spirulina safely stored and sealed.
3.9. Superfood storage jar.
Americans are becoming more aware of the value of nutritional supplements for an aging population. Business Week (October 9, 1989) 20 identified a new category for the food industry: Nutrition of the Future Foods that Fight Aging, highlighting the role of antioxidant nutrients: vitamins C, E and beta carotene. Antioxidants sop up rogue oxygen atoms, called free radicals, that some researchers believe roam through the bloodstream, wrecking havoc on cells and organs and increasing aging effects and the risks of cancer. Anti-aging foods and supplements for older people who dont eat much, eat inappropriately, or cant absorb enough nutrients will probably be in the form of high-nutrient foods. This practically describes spirulina: a digestible whole food with the highest beta-carotene level of any food. Now big multi-vitamin companies are jumping on the bandwagon, promoting the addition of beta-carotene because of its anti-cancer and anti-aging effects. But theyre adding synthetic beta carotene. Already, research has shown natural beta carotene from vegetables and algae like spirulina has far greater antioxidant properties than the synthetic. Many international businessmen work hard all day, socialize with clients and co-workers at night, and the next day rise early, ready to go again. Some have discovered a new secret. Ten or more spirulina tablets with two glasses of water after an evening on the town can reduce or even prevent the worst effects of hangovers the next day. After too much alcohol, two glasses of water are essential for rehydration. Spirulina adds protein, vitamins and minerals to rebuild the bodys depleted nutrients. It does not aid sobriety, but with water, helps avoid that dehydrated and depleted feeling the next morning.
3.8. Japanese hangover relief supplement with spirulina.
Regardless of your personal self-care strategy, people who take it each day report the most health benefits, whether it is for energy, building, cleansing, or dieting. One additional benefit you may notice from regular use is more beautiful skin. We need all the protection we can get from eating the right foods like spirulina.
59
58
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Chapter 4
(This information is solely for education and information purposes. It is not intended as medical advice. People with medical questions should consult their physician or health professional.)
60
61
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Latest Scientific Research Effects on the AIDS Virus, Cancer and the Immune System.
by Ronald Henson and Richard Kozlenko DPM, Ph.D. M.P.H. There are several new peer reviewed scientific studies about spirulinas ability to inhibit viral replication, strengthen both the cellular and humoral arms of the immune system and cause regression and inhibition of cancers. While these studies are preliminary and more research is needed, the results so far are exciting. In April 1996, scientists from the Laboratory of Viral Pathogenesis, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School and Earthrise Farms announced on-going research, saying Water extract of Spirulina platensis inhibits HIV-1 replication in human derived T-cell lines and in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. A concentration of 5-10 g/ml was found to reduce viral production.1 HIV-1 is the AIDS virus. Small amounts of spirulina extract reduced viral replication while higher concentrations totally stopped its reproduction. Importantly, with a therapeutic index of >100, spirulina extract was non-toxic to the human cells at concentrations stopping viral replication. Another group of medical scientists in Japan has published new studies regarding a purified water extract unique to spirulina named Calcium-Spirulan. It inhibits replication of HIV-1, Herpes Simplex, Human Cytomegalovirus, Influenza A virus, Mumps virus and Measles virus in-vitro yet is very safe for human cells. It protects human and monkey cells from viral infection in cell culture. According to peer reviewed scientific journal reports this extract, holds great promise for treatment of HIV-1, HSV-1, and HCM infections, which is particularly advantageous for AIDS patients who are prone to these life-threatening infections.2 Calcium-Spirulan is a polymerized sugar molecule unique to spirulina containing both Sulfur and Calcium. Hamsters treated with this water soluble extract had better recovery rates when infected with an otherwise lethal Herpes virus.3
62
Several studies show spirulina or its extracts can prevent or inhibit cancers in humans and animals. Some common forms of cancer are thought to be a result of damaged cell DNA running amok, causing uncontrolled cell growth. Cellular biologists have defined a system of special enzymes called Endonuclease which repair damaged DNA to keep cells alive and healthy. When these enzymes are deactivated by radiation or toxins, errors in DNA go unrepaired and, cancer may develop. In vitro studies suggest the unique polysaccharides of spirulina enhance cell nucleus enzyme activity and DNA repair synthesis. This may be why several scientific studies, observing human tobacco users and experimental cancers in animals, report high levels of suppression of several important types of cancer. The subjects were fed either whole spirulina or treated with its water extracts.
63
Anti-Cancer Effects
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Strengthens Immune System
Spirulina is a powerful tonic for the immune system. In scientific studies of mice, hamsters, chickens, turkeys, cats and fish, it consistently improves immune system function. Medical scientists find it not only stimulates the immune system, it actually enhances the bodys ability to generate new blood cells. Important parts of the immune system, Bone Marrow Stem Cells, Macrophages, T-cells and Natural Killer cells, exhibit enhanced activity. Spleen and Thymus glands show enhanced function. Scientists also observe spirulina causing macrophages to increase in number, become activated and, more effective at killing germs.
4.3. Key players in immunity that are stimulated in the presence of spirulina or its extracts.
4.4. Spirulina or its extracts have demonstrable effect in stimulating production of new red and white blood cells.
64
65
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Based on this effect, spirulina is approved in Russia as a medicine food for treating radiation sickness. The Children of Chernobyl suffer radiation poisoning from eating food grown on radioactive soil. Their bone marrow is damaged, rendering them immunodeficient. Radiation damaged bone marrow cannot produce normal red or white blood cells. The children are anemic and suffer from terrible allergic reactions. Children fed just five grams in tablets each day made dramatic recoveries within six weeks.75 Spirulina is one of the most concentrated sources of nutrition known. It contains all the essential amino acids, rich in chlorophyll, beta-carotene and its co-factors, and other natural phytonutrients. This is the only green food rich in GLA essential fatty acid. GLA stimulates growth in some animals and makes skin and hair shiny and soft yet more durable. GLA also acts as an anti-inflammatory, sometimes alleviating symptoms of arthritic conditions. Spirulina acts as a functional food, feeding beneficial intestinal flora, especially Lactobacillus and Bifidus. Maintaining a healthy population of these bacteria in the intestine reduces potential problems from opportunistic pathogens like E. coli and Candida albicans. Studies show when spirulina is added to the diet, beneficial intestinal flora increase. Based on this preliminary research, scientists hope the use of spirulina and its extracts may reduce or prevent cancers and viral diseases. Bacterial or parasitic infections may be prevented or respond better to treatment and wound healing may improve. Symptoms of anemia, poisoning and immunodeficiency may be alleviated. Scientists in the USA, Japan, China, Russia, India and other countries are studying this remarkable food to unlock its potential. More research is needed to determine its usefulness against AIDS and other killer diseases. However, it is already clear this safe and natural food provides concentrated nutritional support for optimum health and wellness.
66
Cholesterol reduction
By now, Americans are well aware of the need to lower cholesterol levels in order to lower the risks of heart attacks and strokes, the number one cause of death. Besides dietary improvements, the search is underway to identify natural foods having a cholesterol reducing effect, such as fish oil or oat bran. Spirulina is one of these foods. In Japan, thirty male employees with high cholesterol, mild hypertension, and hyperlipidemia showed lower serum cholesterol, triglyceride and LDL (undesirable fat) levels after eating spirulina for eight weeks. These men did not change their diet, except adding spirulina. Group A consumed 4.2 grams (about 8 tablets) daily for eight weeks. Total serum cholesterol dropped a significant 4.5% within four weeks from 244 to 233. Group B consumed spirulina for four weeks, then stopped. Serum cholesterol decreased but then returned to the initial level. Researchers found triglyceride levels decreased slightly and LDL cholesterol decreased a significant 6.1% within four weeks. The reduction of serum cholesterol was even greater in those men with the highest cholesterol levels. This study conducted by the Department of Internal Medicine of Tokai University concluded spirulina did lower serum cholesterol and was likely to have a favorable effect on alleviating heart disease since the arterioscelosis index improved. No adverse effects were noted. The study did not speculate on how it lowered cholesterol.7 Researchers in West Germany had previously discovered cholesterol reduction during a weight loss study with spirulina.8 Japanese research showed lower cholesterol without weight loss, suggesting that cholesterol reduction was not related to weight loss. Spirulina was chosen because it previously lowered serum cholesterol in rats.9,10 A recent study with rats attempted to find the compound in spirulina that lowered serum cholesterol. Researchers discovered that the benefit may be through its effect on metabolism of lipoproteins. The oil soluble portion was found to suppress cholesterol levels in the serum and liver of rats.11
Conclusion
67
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Cancer is the number two cause of premature death in Americans. Increasing cancer rates seem to be caused by environmental factors, especially diet. Scientists are examining foods and substances having protective factors. Beta carotene is one of the most well known natural anti-cancer substances. Over the past 20 years, cancer health authorities, National Cancer Institute and dozens of publicized studies have shown evidence that eating vegetables rich in beta carotene reduces the risk of all kinds of cancer. Beta carotene is the main source of Vitamin A for humans. Our bodies convert beta carotene to Vitamin A as we need it. Although very high dosages of Vitamin A supplements are toxic, high amounts of beta carotene from foods and supplements are safe. Spirulina is the richest beta carotene food known, having over ten times more beta carotene than any other food, including carrots. Beta carotene is one of the most effective substances for deactivating free radicals, which damage cells, leading to cancer. Free radicals are molecular fragments from environmental pollution, toxic chemicals, drugs, and physical and emotional stress. Beta carotene prevents free radicals from reacting, and decreases incidence of lung cancer, prevents chemically induced tumors in animals, prevents precancerous prechromosome damage and enhances immunological resistance. Over 100 animal studies confirm Vitamin A and beta carotene inhibit development of various cancers and tumors. Many human epidemiological studies correlated high Vitamin A intake with decreased cancer risks.12 Beta carotene (and not preformed Vitamin A from animal sources) correlated with lower cancer rates.13 Over 15 studies from 1975-1986 correlated lower incidence of lung cancer with beta carotene and Vitamin A. One study found the lower the serum level of beta carotene, the higher incidence of lung cancer.14 Nine studies from 1974-1986 correlated lower digestive tract cancer (oral, stomach, colon, gastrointestinal) with beta carotene and Vitamin A. Two studies with women correlated lower breast and cervix cancer. A five year study in China completed in 1993 with 29,000 people revealed daily doses of beta carotene, vitamin E and selenium reduced the incidence of cancer deaths by 13%.15
68
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Patient
human cells human cells hamsters humans rats rats hamsters humans mice mice rabbits mice mice chickens cats rats rats rats rats rats rats humans humans microbial cells microbial cells humans humans humans humans humans rats rats humans humans humans humans mice humans humans humans
4.5.
Medical Subject
Anti-Aids viral effect Anti-viral effect Anti-herpes viral effect Lowering cholesterol Lowering cholesterol Lowering cholesterol Reducing oral cancer tumors Reducing oral cancer tumors Anti-liver cancer tumor Builds bone marrow Immune enhancement Immune enhancement Immune enhancement Immune enhancement Immune enhancement Reducing kidney poisons from drugs and heavy metals Reducing liver toxin from dioxin Effect against diabetes Reduces blood pressure Building healthy lactobacillus Treating external wounds Treating external wounds Infection (antibiotic action) Infection (antibiotic action) Recovering from malnutrition Recovering from malnutrition Treating nutritional deficiencies Treating nutritional deficiencies Treating nutritional deficiencies High iron bioavailability Correcting iron anemia Correcting iron anemia Iron deficit in athletes Treating infirmities with GLA Weight lowering effect Radiation protective effects Reducing radionucleides Reducing radiation allergies Detoxify radiation pollutants
Part of the global effort to identify natural substances with an immune system boosting or anti-cancer effect focuses on blue-green algae. One unusual phytonutrient in blue-green algae is the natural blue protein pigment, phycocyanin. In research in Japan, phycocyanin was taken orally by mice with liver cancer. Survival rate of the treatment group was significantly higher than the control group not given phycocyanin. After five weeks, 90% of the phycocyanin group survived, but only 25% of the control group. After eight weeks, 25% of the phycocyanin group still survived, yet none of the control group was alive. This suggests phycocyanin may increase survival of cancer stricken organisms. In another study, after two weeks the white blood cells (lymphocyte activity) of a phycocyanin group were higher than the control group and higher than or equal to a normal group without cancer. This suggests phycocyanin raises lymphocyte activity.21 The lymph systems general function is to maintain healthy organs in the body, and protect against cancer, ulcers, bleeding piles and other diseases. These results suggest phycocyanin acts not by a limited attack on local cancer, but by strengthening the bodys resistance through the lymph system. Phycocyanin may be active in preventing degenerative organ diseases by boosting immunity. A Japanese patent states a small dosage of phycocyanin daily maintains or accelerates normal control cell functions that prevents generation of malignancy such as cancer or inhibits its growth or recurrence.22 The patent recommends a phycocyanin dosage in a range of 0.25 to 2.5 grams per day. Spirulina from Earthrise Farms, California and Siam Algae, Thailand have a high 15% phycocyanin content. This means the patent recommended adult dosage would be filled by consuming 1.7 to 17 grams per day, making about ten grams a day a useful level. Chinese scientists documented phycocyanin stimulates hematopoesis (creation of blood), emulating the hormone erythropoetin (EPO). EPO is produced by healthy kidneys and regulates bone marrow stem cell production of red blood cells. They claim phycocyanin regulated white blood cell production, even when bone marrow stem cells are damaged by toxic chemicals or radiation.23
71
70
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
In 1979, Russian scientists published initial research on the immune stimulating effects on rabbits from lipopolysaccharides in spirulina.24 More recent studies in China and Japan have shown polysaccharide extracts increased macrophage function, antibody production and infection fighting T-cells. In 1991-94 in China, polysaccharides and phycocyanin from spirulina increased immunity in mice by enhancing bone marrow reproduction, growth of thymus and spleen and biosynthesis of serum protein.25,26,27,28 In 1993 in Japan, hamsters treated with a polysaccharide extract had better recovery rates when infected with a herpes virus.3 In 1996, a water extract unique to spirulina, Calcium Spirulan, inhibited replication of HIV-1, Herpes Simplex and other viruses, yet was very safe for human cells.2 In the USA, a water soluble extract increased macrophage activity in chickens. In further 1993-96 studies, chickens fed a diet with less than 1% spirulina showed improved immune performance without any adverse side effects The whole immune system array of killer cells, helper cells and antibody production was supercharged.29,30 Similar benefits were found for cats.31 Researchers are testing the theory that spirulina and its extracts act much like a broad spectrum vaccine against bacteria. Because it is a safe natural food, this research has created a sensation among animal scientists. They are scrambling to replace ineffective antibiotics with probiotics that strengthen the immune system and prevent disease. Based on this animal research, as little as 3 grams per day may be effective for humans.32 In 1996, U.S. scientists announced on-going research, documenting that a water extract of spirulina inhibits HIV-1 replication in human derived T-cells and in human blood mononuclear cells.1 HIV-1 is the AIDS virus. Small amounts of the extract reduced viral replication, while higher concentration totally stopped its reproduction. The extract seemed to prevent the virus from penetrating the cell membrane, therefore the virus was unable to replicate. This spirulina extract was non-toxic to human cells. The scientists said this was only preliminary research, to be followed by animal and human studies.
The Natural Products Branch of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) is searching the world for natural plants and organisms that have biologically active anti-cancer agents. The famous periwinkle plant in the Madagascar rain forests is one example of a new cancer cure. Having scoured terrestrial organisms, scientists are now looking towards the sea. NCI scientists have screened 18,000 extracts of marine organisms for activity against tumors, viruses and fungi and for immune system stimulation properties. Extracts of sea squirts, sea whip soft corals, and sea sponges offer potential new drugs. In 1986, the NCI began studying thousands of types of blue-green algae for effects against the AIDS virus and 100 types of cancer. In 1989, the NCI announced that chemicals from blue-green algae were found to be remarkably active against the AIDS virus.33 These are the naturally occurring sulfolipid portions of the glycolipids. Sulfolipids can prevent viruses from either attaching to or penetrating into cells, thus preventing viral infection. NCI emphasized that a larger testing program including tests on humans with the AIDS virus would not begin until sulfolipids can be obtained in much larger quantities. These scientists further speculated that if sulfolipids proved effective, used in combination with drugs like AZT, they would be safer and more effective. Scientists used extracts of the blue-green algae lyngbya, phormidium, oscillatoria (a member of the spirulina family) and anabaena. Spirulina is known to contain glycolipids and sulfolipids.34 It contains 5-8% lipids, and of that, about 40% are glycolipids, and 2-5% are sulfolipids.35 Analysis by Earthrise Farms revealed it has about 1% sulfolipids. Blue-green algae can be cultivated in ways to significantly increase the lipids, and presumably, the sulfolipids. This means it could be grown on a large scale for extraction of this valuable anti-cancer and anti-AIDS substance. In 1996, NCIscientists announced another extract from the blue-green algae nostoc, cyanovirin-n, could be a broad spectrum virucidal agent against HIV. This unique antiviral protein was selected for further high-priority preclinical development.36
73
72
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Kidneys play an essential role in cleansing the body of toxins. Heavy metals and many drugs are known to be toxic to the kidneys. Scientists are interested in substances that can help cleanse the kidneys of toxic side effects from heavy metal poisoning or from high intake of medicines or pharmaceutical drugs. In Japan, spirulina reduced kidney toxicity from mercury and three pharmaceutical drugs in laboratory rats.37 Scientists measured two indicators of kidney toxicity-blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and serum creatinine. When the rats were fed a diet with 30% spirulina, BUN and serum creatinine levels decreased dramatically. Similar effects were observed when rats were given common drug medications: para-aminophenol (painkiller), Gentamicin (antibiotic) and cis-dichloro-diaminoplatinum (anti-cancer drug). In all cases, the spirulina diet greatly decreased BUN and serum creatinine levels, and in two cases, brought serum creatinine down to original levels. In a follow-up study, urinary excretion of two enzymes were measured as further indicators of renal function. The activities of both were significantly reduced in the group fed 30% spirulina. The effective compound responsible for the suppression of renal toxicity was the water soluble extract, phycocyanin.38 These studies suggest spirulina may have a beneficial effect for humans suffering from heavy metal poisoning. They also suggest kidney side effects from pharmaceutical drugs may decrease when it is eaten along with the administration of drugs. Side effects limit the dosage of many drugs, slowing the recovery period. With clinical use in hospitals or with outpatients, higher dosage of such drugs and shorter recovery times may be possible. In any event, study of the kidney cleansing effect offers an insight into the cleansing effects people have reported while fasting. A 1997 study found liver detoxification of chemical dioxins (polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins). The fecal excretion of dioxin was 7 to 11 times higher for rats on a diet of chlorophyll rich foods (20% chlorella, 20% spirulina or 2% chlorophyllin). These finding suggest chlorella, spirulina and chlorophyllin are useful as a new approach in treatments of patients exposed to lipophilic zenobiotics.38A
74
Reduces kidney and liver toxicity from mercury, drugs and chemical pollutants
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
As little a ten grams a day brings rapid recovery from malnutrition, especially for infants. Spirulina was given to undernourished children in Mexico,47 and adults48 with beneficial results. It was more than 10% of their diet and no adverse effects were noted. In Togo, recovery of malnourished infants was reported in a village clinic. Children given 10 to 15 grams per day mixed with millet, water and spices, recovered in several weeks.49 In India, large scale studies with preschool children showed carotenes in spirulina helped children recover from symptoms of Vitamin A deficiency.50,51 In Romania, tablets were given to patients with nutritional deficiencies in a Bucharest municipal clinic. Patients had suffered weight loss in conjunction with chronic pancreatitis, rheumatoid arthritis, anemia, diabetes and other symptoms. The patients gained weight and their health improved.52 In China, spirulina was prescribed at Nanjing Children's Hospital as a baby nourishing formula with baked barley sprouts. 27 of 30 children aged two to six recovered in a short period from bad appetite, night sweat, diarrhea and constipation. The researchers concluded this is a genuine health food for children.53 In another study, children deficient in the essential mineral zinc, made more rapid recovery with high zinc spirulina than a standard zinc supplement.54 Iron is the most common mineral deficiency worldwide. Iron anemia is prevalent in women, children, older people, and women on weight loss diets. Iron is essential for healthy red blood cells and a strong immune system, but typical iron supplements are not well absorbed by the human body. Because spirulina is known to have a very high iron content, it was tested against a typical iron supplement. Spirulina fed rats absorbed 60% more iron than rats fed the iron supplement, suggesting there is a highly available form of iron in spirulina.55 An earlier study showed it corrected anemia in rats.56 In Japan, eight young women had been limiting their meals to stay thin, and showed hypochronic anemia lower than normal blood hemoglobin content. After four grams of spirulina after each meal, in 30 days, blood hemoglobin content increased 21% from 10.9 to 13.2, a satisfactory level, no longer considered anemic.57
76
EARTH FOOD
Years after the Chernobyl disaster, four million people in Ukraine and Belarus live in dangerously radioactive areas. The water, soil and food over an 11,000 square mile area is contaminated. Over 160,000 children are victims of radiation poisoning, with birth defects, leukemia, cancer, thyroid disease, anemia, loss of vision and appetite and depressed immune system, now called Chernobyl AIDS. Doctors reported spirulinas health benefits for child victims of Chernobyl radiation. Spirulina reduced urine radioactivity levels by 50% in only 20 days. This result was achieved by giving 5 grams a day to children at the Minsk, Belarus Institute of Radiation Medicine. The Institute program treated 100 children every 20 days. An unpublished 1993 report confirmed 1990-91 research, concluding spirulina decreases radiation dose load received from food contaminated with radionucleides, Cesium-137 and Strontium-90. It is favorable for normalizing the adaptive potential of childrens bodies in conditions of long-lived low dose radiation.71 Based on testing in 1990, the Belarus Ministry of Health concluded spirulina promotes the evacuation of radionucleides from the human body. No side effects were registered. The Ministry considered this food was advisable for the treatment of people subject to radiation effects, and requested additional donations from the Earthrise Company of California and Dainippon Ink & Chemicals of Japan.72
4.6. Nurse and child radiation victim, at a medical clinic in Belarus.
Previous research in China in 1989 demonstrated a natural polysaccharide extract of spirulina had a protective effect against gamma radiation in mice.74 Subsequent research showed phycocyanin and polysaccharides enhanced the reproduction of bone marrow and cellular immunity.26
78
The pace of scientific research on spirulinas health benefits accelerates as scientists unlock its secrets. Important new studies are published every year. The SpirulinaSource.com Health Library is one of the worlds best spirulina information sources, with hundreds of scientific and popular references online, updated regularly.
79
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Chapter 5
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Products Around the World Popularity subsides, 1984-1986 Because of this supply shortage, many new brands sold by diet pill companies were adulterated, having less than 50% of the amount claimed on the label. Some products contained none at all. A lot was adulterated with alfalfa or cheap green fillers. The media hype led most people to believe it was nothing but a diet product. Hoping to magically lose weight, most people paid for green pills that were not even the real thing, and they experienced little health benefit. Spirulina hit bottom by 1986. Coming back, 1987-1990 Natural food consumers who knew how to use it properly and enjoy its benefits remained faithful. As more people recognized the real health value, demand steadily rose again, along with the other green superfoods such as chlorella (green algae) and aphanizomenon (blue-green algae), barley grass and wheat grass. Green superfoods have grown in popularity about 30% per year since 1990. Renewed growth, 1991 to the present New spirulina products appeared, formulated with natural herbs, phytonutrients, vitamins and minerals to raise energy levels, reduce pre-menstrual stress, boost athletic performance and endurance, promote a lighter appetite and antioxidant protection. Meal replacements with spirulina offered chocolate, fruit and vanilla flavors. Companies invented snack bars, pasta, and fruit and vegetable juices. The public has become aware that nutraceutical foods have health benefits beyond simple nutrition, and that whole foods with phytonutrient compounds can help prevent disease. As more research on spirulinas health benefits were published, it became better known as a potent nutraceutical. By 1997, along with the new U.S. label regulations, dietary and herbal supplements began to display label claims about health, structure and function benefits. This new labeling and rising health publicity propelled natural food and herbal supplements into the mainstream markets. By the late 1990s, big increases in spirulina supply coming from China and India drove down product prices across Asia, Europe and North America, making spirulina more affordable for more people.
83
Market evolution in the USA For centuries, traditional peoples have eaten seaweeds and aquatic vegetables. The first microalgae cultivated and sold in modern society was chlorella. Beginning in the 1970s, thousands of tons have been sold as health food supplements. Chlorella offers many benefits, backed by decades of clinical research. Japanese culture has always been receptive to sea products. Spirulina began selling in Japan as a health food supplement in the late 1970s. In the USA it was introduced in 1979 through natural food stores by Earthrise Company, and through multi-level sales by the Light Force Company. Introduction, 1979-1981 Would Americans eat algae? The natural food market seemed a good place to ask. In the 1970s about 10% of all U.S. consumers were already eating some health or natural foods. They chose food based on nutritional information, not simply inherited cultural traditions. Concerned about the decline in food quality from over-processing, chemical additives, toxic pesticides and pollutants, they opted for natural foods over synthetic supplements. Natural food customers embraced this new algae, discovering many new ways to use it in their diet. Spirulina gathered a small, dedicated and steadily growing following, but remained a long way from mainstream recognition. Diet boom, 1981-1983 In 1981, a national tabloids front page headlines announced: Doctors Praise: A Safe Diet Pill Youll Never Go Hungry.1 The article claimed spirulina was a safe and effective appetite suppressant. The next day, thousands of people who had never been inside a health food store, lined up to try out the latest magic diet pill. Spirulina became a new diet phenomenon. News was passed by word of mouth, by magazines and newspapers, by radio and television. Hundreds of diet pill companies jumped on the bandwagon, rushing their brand to market. Within a month, new brands appeared in health food stores, drug stores and supermarkets. But there wasnt enough to go around. The entire world supply in 1981 was about 500 tons per year, from Mexico and Thailand. Much of this was already contracted by Japanese companies, and only several hundred tons per year of authentic spirulina actually entered the US market.
82
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
8 2 4
10 5
12
13
11
5.8. Korea. 5.9. Germany. 5.10. Venezuela. 5.11. Japan. 5.12. Costa Rica. 5.13. Spain.
84
85
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
14
for fish, birds, animals and pets Demand is surging for specialty aquaculture feeds that increase growth rates and disease resistance for farmed fish and prawns. Tropical fish, ornamental birds, animals and pets of all kinds consume much of the global spirulina production.
The first modern use was to color the highly prized fancy koi carp in the Orient. These beautiful fish have distinctive bright red, yellow, orange, white and black markings and are often seen swimming in ornamental pools and fountains. They have been bred by hobbyists and fish culturists in Japan and China for centuries. If properly taken care of, koi can live longer than people, becoming family pets for several generations. Champion fish will sell for tens of thousands of dollars each, so feeding them the right food is a good investment. Koi feeds include 5 to 20% spirulina for its rich carotene pigments that enhance the red and yellow patterns, while leaving a brilliant pure white. This clarity and color definition increases their value.
A specialty food
15
16
17
Slovenia dips. China. Germany pasta. New Zealand. Canada. Korea soap Germany - SpiruSkin care
18
19
20
5.20. A popular brand of fish food for koi, ciclids and other colorfish contains spirulina as a key ingredient.
86
87
EARTH FOOD
5.21.
Spirulina
Species Aquariums
Ayu fish Improves flavor and texture of meat, improves color, reduces disease. Baby fish
Increased resistance to parasites, viral and bacterial diseases due to enhanced cellular immune system function. Stimulates feed- ing, better survival, improved appearance.
Brine shrimp
Replaces live algae for growth. Use as enrichment before feeding to fish or prawns. Improves color.
Enhances skin quality, color, shine and disease resistance. Improves appearance. Increases appetite, nutrition, growth and survival rates. Improves growth and reproduction. Replaces live algae. Increases resistance to disease, stimulates growth, improves reproduction and enhances color. Improves growth in nursery, reduces need for live algae. Enhances disease resistance, improves appetite, skin quality, color, reproduction. Protects from parasite infection and bacterial disease. Enhances cellular immune system function, coloration and appetite. Enhances skin quality, color, shine and disease resistance. Improves appearance. Reduces disease, increases growth and survival. Enhances coloration.
Yellowtail tuna
88
89
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Aqaculture fish are grown from tiny hatchery fry. This first stage is difficult and critical for success in aquaculture. Often, survival rates are very low. Spirulina added to the feed ration at 1 to 10% levels increases survival rates, allowing fish to reach market size sooner. It is the best food for tiny brine shrimp, sold in pet stores as a popular food for aquarium fish. Tiny zooplankton are another delicious food for larger fish, but growers have found them hard to cultivate. When fed spirulina, chances of successful cultivation improve greatly. For many species of exotic tropical fish, algae are an essential part of the diet. Spirulina promises five benefits for healthy aquarium fish: 1) great profile of natural vitamins and minerals, 2) rich in mucoproteins for healthy skin, 3) phycocyanin for reduced obesity and better health, 4) essential fatty acids for proper organ development, 5) rich in natural coloring agents such as carotenoids. Feeding this algae will result in beautiful, healthy and longer lived tropical fish.2 Spirulina will not grow in the aquarium tank. Hobbyists can find floating flake food enriched with spirulina in many pet shops. Tablets dropped into an aquarium can create excitement. Some hobbyists use frozen food or make their own homemade fish foods. Public aquariums use spirulina to feed marine fish and invertebrates, and to raise daphnia and brine shrimp to feed to their fish.
Zoos around the world feed flamingos and ibis a diet rich in spirulina, and report improvement in health and color. Algae increases feather color and shine, healthy beaks and skin, and promotes good bacteria in the digestive tract. Birds appear healthier, without synthetic vitamins, drugs or chemicals.4 For hobbyists, pet birds can be more beautiful, healthier and live longer. Spirulina is very concentrated; use at 1 or 2% of total diet. Ailing birds may be fed more, not exceeding 5% of diet. Sprinkle powder over soft food or mix dry into baby hand feeding formula.
90
For healthy skin and lustrous coat, spirulina is an excellent supplement for all cats and dogs, especially for nursing mothers and bottlefed kittens and puppies. Appetites of finicky cats have been known to perk up with a little sprinkled on their food. Owners report spirulina fed pets have a fresher breath odor. Use a spoonful of powder in an empty salt shaker and sprinkle over soft moist food. Very concentrated. A little goes a long way. Use at about 1% of dry weight of daily food intake. Just a pinch each day for small cats and kittens; for large cats and nursing mothers use 1/4 teaspoon. For small dogs use 1/4 teaspoon each day; medium dogs use 1/2; large dogs use 1; giant dogs, 2 or more. Use 1/4 or 1/2 tablet a day for small cats and kittens; large cats and nursing mothers use 1 tablet. For small dogs use 1/2 or 1 tablet; medium dogs use 2 ; large dogs 3-4; giant dogs, 4 or more.
91
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Owners of highly valued racehorses use spirulina in their feed ration for faster times and recovery, but trainers tend to keep results secret. Dairy farmers use it to keep cows healthy by improving intestinal flora that is so important in ruminants. As a tonic for horses and cows, 1/2 ounce may be used twice a day for each 100 pounds of body weight by mixing in slightly dampened feed. Reports have circulated that it increases the sperm count of breeding bulls and fertility in females, raising the reproduction rates of valued species.
5.25.
Improves feather quality, color, fertility, speeds development of immune system in babies for better resistance to infection. Improves coat, healthy skin, healing, resistance to viral infections and cancer. Improves coat, healthy skin, reduces dermatitis, improves disease resistance.
Dog Horse
Reduces anemia, builds red and white blood cells, improves appetite, energy, resistance to infection, recovery from injury. Shiny coat. Improves feather quality, color, fertility, speeds development of immune system in babies for better resistance to infection.
Parrot
Rabbit Reptile
Improves resistance to respiratory infection. Improves skin gloss, cleaner shedding, disease resistance.
Benefits
Short-term therapeutic for mastitis, stimulates appetite. Reduces early poultry mortality. Improves disease resistance in weaner pigs.
Poultry Swine
Spirulina is the best source of chlorophyll-a, and it is extracted for a green food color. Chlorella, has more chlorophyll-b, a grayer green color extracted and used in mouthwashes and deodorants. In the U.S., the Food and Drug Administration regulates food colors and additives. The FDA requires a long and expensive approval process before natural colors can be used in foods and cosmetics, making it difficult for natural colors to replace chemical food dyes. Europeans are switching from chemical to natural food colors, and natural blue from spirulina is available there.
93
5.26. Yuki enjoys spirulina colored chewing gum (courtesy H. Shimamatsu). 5.27. Japanese chewing gum advertisement.
92
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Fluorescent markers for medical tests
Purified algae extracts are used to track diseases in the human body. These phycobiliproteins are highly sensitive fluorescent dyes. They improve detection of cancer, screen donated blood for AIDS and monitor blood levels of drugs. They enable simultaneous tracking of several diseases in a single sample, allowing easier diagnoses. Phycobiliproteins are natural pigments in red and blue-green algae, including spirulina. They have names like allophycocyanin, B-phycoerythrin, R-phycoerythrin, C-phycoerythrin, C-phycocyanin. When purified, they are fluorescent, stable, and water soluble. Researchers watch these fluorescent markers under a microscope, and follow their path inside the human body. They can be easily linked to molecules such as monoclonal antibodies. When these antibodies attach to receptor sites on cells or tissues, the cells can be viewed by the glowing dye marker illuminated by a beam of light.7 Prices for purified phycobiliproteins range from $8,000 to $40,000 per gram. They are used in medical diagnostic kits and fluorescenceactivated cell sorter (FACS) instruments in hospital laboratories, but are prized because they are 10-30 times more intense than conventional dyes and are an alternative to unpopular radioactive markers.8 Live spirulina contains many enzymes. Among these, three restriction enzymes have been discovered. Restriction enzymes (endonucleases) work like scissors to cut the DNA of invading enemy microbes. Researchers in genetic engineering use restriction enzymes to cut DNA at precise locations.9 One unique restriction enzyme in spirulina called Spl-1 is not found in any other microbe, bacteria, fungi or algae. Japanese scientists extract Spl-1 from living spirulina, and sell it as a reagent for genetic research in laboratories and institutes. Other enzymes are extracted from the blue-green algae anabaena and nostoc. One theory proposed to explain spirulinas long life is the role of restriction enzymes. By cutting the DNA of invading enemy microbes, spirulina is thought to protect itself from threatening bacteria or viruses. The three identified restriction enzymes may have been good weapons against ecological enemies for 3.5 billion years.10
94
95
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Higher phycocyanin and beta carotene
By carefully selecting the species, adapting the growing conditions, and using low temperature drying, some farms produce a higher phycocyanin content. Heat sterilization can destroy this prized natural blue pigment. Spirulina from Earthrise Farms in California and Siam Algae in Thailand contains 15 to 20% phycocyanin, and is the most desired for color extraction. Both Earthrise and Cyanotech of Hawaii produce spirulina with higher beta carotene. Scientists want to increase specific essential fatty acid content, especially gamma-linolenic acid. GLA is 1% of spirulina, and comprises 20% of its lipid content. By modifying growing conditions, scientists hope to raise GLA content to 5%, and at least double the sulfolipids. Commercial products may eventually follow from the NCI research identifying anti-cancer and anti-AIDS effects of sulfolipids. If sulfolipids were extracted, the remainder would be a concentrated food with protein, minerals and vitamins largely intact. As the aquaculture industry expands, there is tremendous opportunity for probiotic specialty feeds. Several companies are already offering fish feeds with natural polysaccharides and beta glucans from yeast to enhance immune activity. These feeds would replace antibiotics used to control disease in farmed animals. There are two problems with antibiotics: 1) appearance of antibiotic resistant microorganisms, and 2) accumulation of antibiotics in fish. With the recent discoveries of the benefits of polysaccharides in spirulina, researchers are studying the immune properties of polysaccharide extracts closely for potential therapeutic uses. Scientists are searching for phytochemicals and pharmaceuticals in algae. Because numerous studies have shown therapeutic effects at low doses, extracts of the active ingredients are promising. Growers will learn how to enhance the concentration of these substances.
96
97
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Chapter 6
EARTH FOOD
Beginning in 1977, the first U.S. algae entrepreneurs began testing pilot ponds. They chose Californias Imperial Valley because of its hot desert sunshine and remote location far from urban pollution. In 1981, a unique partnership between these California entrepreneurs and Japanese Corporate intrapreneurs founded Earthrise Farms. They shared a common vision of microalgaes coming impact on the global economy. Earthrise Farms began production in 1982. Merging U.S. and Japanese innovation, technology and resources, Earthrise became the worlds largest spirulina farm, expanding to cover the entire 108 acre site. and today supplies over 40 countries with the worlds best known spirulina. In 1996, the farm produced nearly 500 metric tons of dry powder.
Hundreds of aquatic organisms can bloom in nutrient rich water in warm sunshine, just as in a natural lake or swimming pool. Unlike a garden, weeding out unwanted algae is a difficult task since this algae is microscopic. Preventing weed algae from taking over is the key to growing a pure culture.
6.4. Pure cultures in the farm laboratory.
Conventional farmers kill weeds and pests in their fields with pesticides and herbicides, leaving residues in the environment, on farm workers, and in your food. Earthrise Farms scientists keep out weed algae without toxic chemicals using a specially designed pond system and balancing the pond ecology. Producing spirulina under these controlled conditions does not allow growth of contaminant or weed algae as in lakes and waterways.
100
101
EARTH FOOD
Ecological farming produces vital, healthy and unpolluted foods. Although there are differences in farming land crops and algae, similar ecological practices are followed at Earthrise. In this remote and sunny part of California, far from cities, highways and airports, the air is clean. Mineral rich Colorado river water, which supplies seven states of the U.S. Southwest, is pumped through canals, to large settling ponds, through filters into the growing ponds.
During the growing season, April through October, ponds are harvested every day. In the peak summer sun, harvesting occurs 24 hours a day, around the clock, to keep up with the explosive growth rate.
6.6. Clean fresh water and nutrients are added daily to feed the algae. No pesticides or herbicides are ever used.
All plants need carbon to grow. Plant leaves take in carbon from the carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere, but algae need carbon in the water. Algae grows so quickly that atmospheric CO2 cannot penetrate the water fast enough to sustain growth, so carbon must be added. The same high quality CO2 used in carbonated drinking waters is pumped directly into the ponds.
102
6.8. Pumps send algae rich water to the sealed harvest building. 6.9. Spirulina is separated from the water by a progression of screens.
Spirulina takes a quick trip through the stainless steel harvest and drying system, never touched by human hands. The first screen filters out pond debris. The next screens harvest the microscopic algae. The nutrient rich water is recycled back to the ponds. The final filter thickens spirulina from green yogurt to green dough. It is still 80% water inside the cells and needs to be dehydrated immediately.
103
EARTH FOOD
Pesticide free
Certified organic
No preservatives, stabilizers or additives are used in drying, and it is never irradiated. This powder has a high content of heat-sensitive phycocyanin, attesting to the drying quality. Fresh dried spirulina can be stored for five years or more in special oxygen barrier containers, retaining nearly full beta carotene potency.
6.11. These containers are shipped from the Earthrise Farms warehouse all over the world.
Spirulina powder is directly compressed into tablets and sealed into both glass and plastic bottles for Earthrise products at a special facility at Earthrise Farms.
6.12. Automated bottling line.
6.13. Juan Chavez, V.P., and certified organic growing pond, 1996.
Super spirulina has enhanced levels of beneficial nutrients. In 1994, Earthrise Farms launched spirulina containing 30 times more zinc, an essential mineral for our immune system. Organically bound zinc is more bioavailable than conventional zinc supplements. Farm scientists have been cooperating with researchers from outside institutions on scientific methodology, to document therapeutic properties and search for bioactive phytonutrients.
105
104
EARTH FOOD
Earthrise Farms technicians collect samples from the pond water and the final dry product for dozens of different analytical tests. Only after each lot has passed all tests is it certified ready to ship, accompanied by a lab report. Independent laboratories in the USAand Japan periodically confirm protein, pigments, amino acids, vitamins, minerals, microbiology and heavy metals.
Because of the concern about toxic blue-algae growing in lakes, Earthrise Farms developed a program to assure these toxic algae are not present in spirulina ponds. First, daily microscopic examinations of the living culture. Second, farm scientists in cooperation with university researchers, developed immunoassay and enzyme inhibition bioassay methods to detect nanogram levels of toxins. In 1998 Earthrise Farms was ISO 9001 registered for the design, production, tableting and bottling of bulk algal and botanical products. The ISO 9000 series of international quality standards are now recognized in over 80 countries around the world. ISO 9001 is the most comprehensive of the standards as it covers product design, engineering, manufacturing, purchasing, marketing and sales. Earthrise Farms is subject to inspections by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the state of California. Its success in exceeding all food safety and quality standards is attributed to the remote farm location, clean air and water, premium quality nutrients, and the total quality management approach to quality control.
106
Third, chlorellas hard cellulose cell wall protects its nucleus but resists digestion by the human body, and nutrients cannot be fully absorbed. Commercial farms crack open this hard cell wall in the drying process, or mechanically crush it. Cell breaking procedures are costly for low technology farms. When researchers rediscovered spirulina in the 1960s, they praised its nutritional value and ease of cultivation. Even though chlorella was cultivated first, many algae scientists soon afterwards forecast spirulina would become a food of the future.
107
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Aphanizomenon - blue-green algae
Many people have asked about differences between spirulina and wild blue-green algae harvested from lakes. Spirulina is one kind of blue-green algae with a long history of safe human consumption,known to be safe and nutritious. Hundreds of published scientific studies over the past thirty years have documented no toxicity. Blue-green algae is also called cyanobacteria. Wild species grow in lakes and waterways, consuming whatever nutrients are in the water. Some species of cyanobacteria are toxic just like mushrooms and some land plants. Most kinds of microcystis, anabaena and aphanizomenon are toxic. Wild blue-green algae has not been subject to spirulinas long safety testing. Companies that harvest wild blue-green algae from natural lakes cannot have the same control as growing spirulina at Earthrise Farms. Harvesting wild algae presents a far greater risk of contamination by cyanobacterial toxins. Spirulina can be cultivated in a pure culture, uncontaminated by other cyanobacteria. Farms can be specially designed and operated to produce spirulina under controlled conditions that do not allow the growth of other contaminant cyanobacteria as in lakes and waterways. Quality control tests assure spirulina meets all international food safety and quality standards. Dunaliella likes hot climates and needs water even saltier than the ocean, making places like the Dead Sea in Israel a good location. Farms are located in Israel, California, Hawaii and Australia. This microalgae is too salty to be eaten directly as a whole food, but its beta carotene, over 10 times more concentrated than spirulina, is extracted as an oil or powder and sold as a natural food supplement and antioxidant and a color for aquaculture feeds. Production in Hawaii and other locations has been launched. Astaxanthin, a carotenoid pigment, is extracted to color salmon flesh, and will also be sold as an antioxidant food supplement.
108
6.17. Aphanizomenon flos-aquae cells in the microscope.
In 1979 Mexican spirulina was first exported to the U.S. for use in health food products, but in 1982 it was blocked by U.S. authorities due to quality problems. Lake Texcoco is located next to Mexico City, one of the most polluted cities. Steps were taken to improve product quality, including heat sterilization to destroy bacteria levels in the lake. Much of it was sold as animal and aquaculture feed. Spirulina Mexicana has been closed for several years.
109
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Myanmar: In 1988, commercial harvest began on several alkaline volcanic lakes that enjoy natural blooms of spirulina. By 1993, 30 tons per year was being harvested and sold on the local market. By 1999 production increased to 100 tons per year. (see Chapter 8). Chad: The alkaline lakes around Lake Chad in Africa offer an ideal location. Commercial ventures have attempted to produce algae near Lake Chad. Meanwhile, indigenous women harvest spirulina dih (described in Chapter 1), distributing nearly 30 tons per year. Most commercial farms are designed and built from the ground up, with shallow raceway ponds circulated by paddlewheels. They operate in a similar fashion to Earthrise Farms. Ponds vary in size up to 5000 square meters (about 1.25 acres), and water depth is usually 15 to 25 centimeters. They require more capital investment per area than lake farms, and operate at higher efficiency and quality control.
Thailand: Dainippon Ink & Chemicals (DIC) started Siam Algae in 1978 near Bangkok, Thailand. With a tropical climate and a yearround growing season, Siam Algae has high productivity and grows 150 tons per year. Most is sold in Japan for health food products. There are several other smaller producers in Thailand. Hawaii, USA: Cyanotech opened a farm in 1985 on the Kona coast on the Big Island of Hawaii. Over the years the farm has expanded, and produces over 400 tons of spirulina per year, as well as dunaliella and haematococcus algae.
110
China: Since 1987, the industry has been sponsored by the State Science and Technology Commission. China may have 80 spirulina producers today, with an annual capacity of well over 500 tons. There are four types: 1) A plateau alkaline salt lake farm, Chenhai Lake in Yunnan, the largest grower. 2) Southern coastal outdoor farms in Guandong, Hainan, Fujian, Jiangshu. The DIC farm on Hainan Island may be the largest, with a capacity of 300 tons per year. 3) Inland semi-closed systems in Hubei and Shandong. 4) High latitute salinealkaline water farms in the Yellow River Valley and Hubei.2,3 India: Research began in late 1970s, from backyard family scale to production farms. In 1990 India established a national standard specification for food grade spirulina. The two largest commercial farms have an estimated capacity of sevaral hundred tons per year.3 Vietnam: Production in Binh Thuan province is about 10 tons per year, sold locally as health food and special feeds.3 Cuba: Two farms produce about 40 tons per year. Chile: In 1991, Solarium started production in the Atacama desert, producing about 3 tons per year. Israel: Desert Research Institute has researched spirulina for over 20 years. Large scale Israeli production did not achieve success. Other farms: There are reports of production in Bangladesh, Philippines, Martinique, Peru, Brazil, Spain, Portugal, Australia and other countries. Spirulina farms are blossoming around the world.
111
6.20. Yaeyama farm in Southern Japan grows chlorella in circular ponds. 6.21. New Ambadi farm in India grows spirulina in raceway style ponds.
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Spirulina needs hot temperatures to grow well. Most temperate climates are too cold for outdoor pond cultivation year round. This limits the locations where it can be grown economically. It may not even be possible to maintain a pure culture of other microalgae outdoors. To grow other high value algae and to increase growth rates, scientists have investigated growing systems called bioreactors. Plexiglass tubes and coils act as solar collectors, increasing temperature and extending the growing season. Algae is pumped continuously through rows of connected flexible transparent tubes or coils. Much greater density can be maintained than in open ponds.
Photobioreactors
6.24. Commercial tubular photobioreactor (Courtesy of Microalgae S.p.a Italy6). 6.25. Commercial modular photobioreactor (Courtesy of Addavita Ltd. UK7).
Advantages are increased productivity, less water loss from evaporation, screening out contaminant algae, greater control over the culture, and ability to grow a pure culture of algae. On the downside, algae may stick to the inside of the tubes and block sunlight, and tubes may get too hot. Excessive oxygen produced by the algae while growing can reduce growth. A vertical plate system has been designed that has a flexible orientation to the sun, and allows oxygen to be released at the bottom.4 When scaled up for commercial spirulina production these systems do not yet compete with lower cost open ponds, but should be useful for other higher value algae.
112
6.22. Continuous loop photobioreactor (Courtesy of L. Tomaselli 5). 6.23. Flat plate reactor for growing spirulina outside (Courtesy of M. Tredici 4).
Ecologically designed future communities may incorporate microfarms. Computers can handle the basic functions of cultivation inside a controlled greenhouse or bioreactor. On a tiny land area, a community could meet a significant portion of its protein and vitamin requirements from microalgae, freeing cropland for community recreation or reforestation.
113
EARTH FOOD
Most advanced farms designed to produce high quality spirulina have necessarily higher production costs. To lower costs, future farms need to integrate sources of nutrients and energy, and produce a variety of end products, from valuable extracts to inexpensive protein. The first company growing spirulina, the French Petroleum Institute, originally began cultivation next to an oil refinery using carbon dioxide gas byproduct to reduce production costs. This venture did not work for a variety of reasons. Nevertheless, the idea of using surplus or recycled nutrients is still very much alive. Future farms may be sited on alkaline lakes in Africa where algae grows on free carbon nutrients. Other farms may locate near oil refineries or industrial centers using surplus industrial nutrients. Hot water from energy plants, or hot geothermal water, may provide heat to grow algae year-round in cooler climates. Using lower cost nutrients will lower production costs and will be attractive in the developing world or nutrient poor regions.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) from biogas digesters fueled by plant, animal or human wastes can be recycled to grow spirulina. On the village level, this was achieved by the integrated system designed by Dr. Ripley Fox, described in Chapter 8.
114
Blue-green algae is fairly simple to genetically alter. Some facilities may use genetic engineering to modify desired chemical compounds, induce the algae to grow faster and better in cold climates, or even fix nitrogen. Although this research holds promise, it is also cause for concern. Scientists cannot foresee all consequences and implications of modifying DNA in organisms. If large commercial farms can use inexpensive resources and energy to grow spirulina, and if they can produce valuable extracts, the byproduct may become a much less costly food, becoming price competitive with other vegetable protein concentrates.
115
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Chapter 7
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
To gain perspective on the cost of spirulina relative to other foods, lets look at assumptions about the price of our food. Most people assume the store price reflects the real cost of producing food. Nothing could be farther from reality. Agribusiness farming practices have externalized many production costs, and relentlessly destroy natural resources. You still pay for these costs, but not at the checkout counter. If you calculate these hidden costs of food you pay indirectly, and add these to the cash price, food prices would be much higher. What are these hidden costs and how did they arise?
Pesticides, fungicides, animal antibiotics, preservatives, chemical food additives, genetically modified organisms and fatty, salty foods all create long term health risks. The over processed foods promoted in advertising campaigns represent a very unhealthy diet. When the U.S. Surgeon General links two-thirds of all deaths to diet, this translates into higher medical bills, higher medical insurance, and higher taxes to support government health programs. Medical health care costs are the fastest growing sector of the U.S. economy.
2. Farm subsidies.
Taxes used for government farm subsidies support agribusiness and encourage wasteful consumption of water and soil. In some irrigation areas, the value of the crops grown with federal water is less than the cost of the water to grow these crops. At one water project, the full cost of water delivered was estimated to be $54 per acre foot, even though farmers were charged only $0.07 per acre foot.1 In 1989, Farmers Home Administration bad loans were estimated at over $20 billion. These hidden subsidies and bad loan policies encourage waste and make food appear to be cheaper to produce and cheaper to buy.
The hidden costs of food production in increased health services, military spending and farm subsidies have been gobbling up government revenues. The resulting budget deficit and interest costs pulls money away from investment in productive assets, blocking meaningful toxic cleanup and environmental restoration. Cheap food is another aspect of our illusionary prosperity, pumped by a galloping national debt. When the U.S. devalues its currency and sells Treasury Bills to fund the national debt, it is selling and consuming real assets much too cheaply today in exchange for debt which must be paid tomorrow.
Agribusiness treats fertile soil and precious fresh water like factory assets to be depreciated. The natural wealth is extracted, and not replaced. It accounts for rapid soil demineralization, salinization and erosion, the shocking drawdown of water aquifers, and the astounding loss of forests all over the world.
For example, does a fast food quarter pound hamburger cost only $2.49?
Pesticides, herbicides and chemical fertilizers pollute our water and land. How much will these poisons hurt us, how long will they last, and what are the cleanup costs? We will pay much more tomorrow for cheap food today.
118
One quarter pound burger may come from U.S. grain fed beef. It takes 16 times as much corn to get protein from beef than from corn directly, and each pound of corn produced causes 2 pounds of topsoil erosion. An inch of topsoil takes 200 to 1000 years to form. Each 1/4 pound hamburger costs 8 pounds of irreplaceable American topsoil.2 Soil and water alone may exceed the $2.49 price tag!
119
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Or, burgers may come from imported beef. The U.S. imports 90% of all Central American beef exports for burgers, 138 million pounds of beef each year. Each burger really takes 55 square feet of tropical forest permanently cleared for grazing land. The burned vegetation emits 500 pounds of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, aggravating the greenhouse effect.3 Thats not $2.49 either! According to the Rainforest Action Network,4 over half of the 5 billion acres of rainforest is gone. If present trends continue, it will be all gone in less than 40 years. In the Amazon, 6,000 rainforest clearing fires were burning out of control in 1988. Expanding cattle ranches have caused 72% of rainforest destruction in Brazil. Deforestation releases about a billion tons of carbon into the atmosphere each year. This represents one sixth of the total carbon release by human activity, adding to the greenhouse effect. How much does this burger that ate a rainforest really cost? A fast food burger could cost $100, depending on how one values the Earths resources. If everyone had the American appetite for beef, the entire planet would have to become one giant beef farm. A further discussion on these subjects is found in two books worth reading: Diet For a Small Planet5 by Frances Moore Lapp, and Diet for a New America6 by John Robbins.
120
7.2. The burger that ate a rain forest London Times, Feb 26. 1989.
7. The accounting system ignores resource costs. It doesnt take nature into account.
We do not know what a fast food burger really costs because the economic accounting system simply ignores natural resource depletion and the concept of sustainable development. Gross National Product (GNP) figures and company balance sheets show man-made capital depreciation, but amazingly, not the consumption of precious soil, water, trees, minerals, fisheries or wildlife. Accounting methods evolved many years ago when natural resources were considered free and unlimited. We need to begin taking nature into account, asserts the World Wildlife Fund. Only when the world economy shifts to natural resource accounting, such as the system developed by the World Resources Institute in Wasting Assets, Natural Resources in the National Income Accounts,7 will we be able to measure the true cost of our food and all other products.
121
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
The Hidden Costs of Food
Spirulinaa algaculture NO NO NO NO NO NO Organic farming NO NO NO NO NO NO Agribusiness crops YES YES YES YES NO YES meat/ dairy YES YES YES YES YES YES
7.4.
Hidden Costs
YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES NO YES NO
YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES NO
Exploitation
122
123
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina cultivation at Earthrise Farms does not cause pollution, soil erosion, water contamination or forest destruction. Spirulina is grown without toxic pesticides and herbicides. These assurances are important to the conscious natural food customer. Spirulina is 60% protein and can be cultivated on marginal, unusable and non-fertile land. Its rapid growth means spirulina protein needs 20 times less land than soybeans, 40 times less than corn, and 200 times less than beef production. Spirulina offers more nutrition per acre than any other food, but doesnt even need fertile soil. Higher food production can be achieved while returning cropland to forest.
One kilo of corn protein causes 22 kilos of topsoil loss. One kilo of protein from corn-fed beef is even more destructive, causing 145 kilos of topsoil loss from the cattle eating all that corn. Spirulina cultivation causes no topsoil erosion.
124
Fresh water is one of the worlds most critical resources. Spirulina can use brackish or alkaline water, unsuitable for agriculture. Growing algae for food will become more attractive since it does not compete with needs for drinking or agriculture.
125
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
More efficient energy use.
Spirulina requires less energy input per kilo than soy, corn or beef, including solar and generated energy. Its energy efficiency (food energy output per kg / energy input per kg) is 3.5 times higher than soy, 1.4 times higher than corn, and over 100 times higher than grain fed beef. As cheap energy resources are depleted in the next 20 years, costs of energy dependent foods will rise with energy prices.
Forests help absorb carbon dioxide. Trees are the best land plants for fixing carbon, from 1 to 4 tons per hectare per year.9 Spirulina is even more efficient. In the California desert, spirulina fixes 6.3 tons of carbon per hectare per year and produces 16.8 tons of oxygen. In the tropics it is 2.5 times more productive.10 Understanding carbon budgets is an emerging field of study. For example, how much new forest area should be planted to offset carbon emissions? In 1988, World Resources Institute recommended a U.S. utility plant 52 million trees in Guatemala to offset CO2 emissions of a new U.S. coal burning power plant over 40 years.11 In the 1990s, carbon budgets will be taken seriously as our planet struggles with global warming from the buildup of atmospheric CO2.
126
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Bank, and governments. These debtor countries are using their limited agricultural resources to grow export crops for hard currency to pay the interest on their debt, and not for food for their own people. The underlying cause of political instability in these regions is the inability of people to control their own resources. Many would agree with the theme of the Hunger Project: Although the world can feed itself, food is not evenly distributed. Hunger persists wherever people lack opportunity to participate in their society and end hunger.16 There are few signs these inequities will soon change. Not only do many people continue to suffer chronic hunger, the environment continues to deteriorate. Desertification and soil depletion worsen from the stress of chemically produced export crops, livestock overgrazing, poor soil management, pollution and rainforest destruction. A 1983 U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) report concluded the developing world as a whole is capable of producing sufficient conventional foods to sustain its own population by the year 2000.17 Yet, because the unrestricted movement of food within the developing world is unrealistic, 65 countries would have insufficient resources to meet their food needs by 2000. The excess population dependent on imported food will rise to 440 million people. These regions include over 20% of Africa where millions of people live. Worldwatch reports desertification claims 15 million acres worldwide each year, an area the size of West Virginia. According to the U.N. Environmental Program (UNEP), 11 billion acres 35% of the earth's land surface are threatened by desertification and, with them, fully one-fifth of humanity.18 Successful economies gobble up cropland. Asia is losing ground. The development boom is eating away Asias cropland. Unless this trend is reversed, political leaders may find themselves facing a new national security problem: food.19 All three problems combine for maximum impact: 1) The green revolution has reached its limits, 2) world food distribution is not likely to change dramatically, and 3) cropland is lost due to economic growth and environmental deterioration. As farmed land turns into desert, or is paved over for infrastructure, less fertile land is available, while population is growing. To face these problems we need unconventional food sources with higher yields.
128
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Chapter 8
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina offers remarkable health benefits to an undernourished person. Its rich beta carotene can overcome eye problems caused by Vitamin A deficiency. The protein and B-vitamin complex makes a major nutritional improvement in an infants diet. Its the only food source, except mothers milk, containing substantial amounts of an essential fatty acid, GLA, which helps regulate the entire hormone system. One tablespoon a day can eliminate iron anemia, the most common mineral deficiency. Spirulina is the most digestible protein food, especially important for malnourished people whose intestines can no longer absorb nutrients effectively. Clinical studies have shown it helps rebuild healthy intestinal flora. These health benefits have made it an excellent food for rapid recovery of children from malnutrition related diseases in Mexico, Togo, Romania, China, Rwanda, Zaire, India, Ukraine and Belarus. In the 1960s and 1970s, small groups of scientists, promoters and visionaries understood what this microalgae could become. Larry Switzer, wrote about his hope for a breakthrough in production: It had to be more productive than conventional agriculture ... adaptable to different climates and cultures ... appropriate ecologically, economically and socially ... independent of the vested interests in world food production and distribution ... capable of relying on renewable energy and waste or abundant raw material resources. It would have to represent a major expansion of the photosynthetic energy base that supports all life on Earth. 8.2. Larry Switzer, 1993. Finally, it would have to radically improve the supply, distribution and consumption of essential protein to millions of pregnant and nursing mothers, infants and children. It is absolutely critical to provide nutrition to the deprived embryos and infants of the world to preserve the precious creative genius that is waiting to be released from each fully developed human mind.2
132
Bioneering visions
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
The enthusiasm, participation and training of the village people are vital to the success of the integrated system. Villagers must be shown how they can improve their own sanitation, health, nutrition and village ecology, and the means to generate income from the compost, biogas fuel, fish and algae. The system is flexible enough to accommodate various cultural traditions. Latrines eliminate the source of intestinal parasites. Where houses are spread out over a wide area, family latrines can produce compost to improve soil fertility. In a village center or market, central latrines can provide continuous wastes to a biogas digester. Animal manure and plant waste are added to the digester which ferments the waste and breaks it down into gas, liquids and solids. A simple gas separator separates biogas into methane (a fuel for cooking and lighting) and carbon dioxide (a nutrient for spirulina). The liquid effluent is sterilized in a series of solar heated pipes and becomes a safe mineral nutrient source for the spirulina pond. Sludge is removed from the digester and composted before spreading on soils. Solar photovoltaic panels produce electricity to run the paddlewheel in the pond, auxiliary lighting for other facilities, as well as recharging batteries. The spirulina is screened from the pond water and can be added to the aquaculture pond to feed fish or dried in a small solar drier for human food. Other important elements of the system include a clean water system and tree planting. Livestock pens are strongly encouraged to help prevent overgrazing, the primary cause of desertification in Africa, leaving whole regions denuded and vulnerable to drought. This Integrated Health and Energy System is a systemic approach to community problems. To succeed, the people themselves need to participate and alter some of their old habits to help revitalize their community. Each successful project becomes the inspiration and training center for the surrounding villages. The design for the Integrated Health and Energy System won the prestigious 1987 European Award for Appropriate Environmental Technology, sponsored by the European Economic Community and the United Nations Environmental Program.
134
135
EARTH FOOD
Every nation is supported on the shoulders of its villages, says Fox. We believe by providing technical assistance to improve sanitation and agricultural output and by saving the trees, we can increase the vitality of these villages.5 Since 1981, Ripley and Denise Fox have worked to bring these tools to the Third World. Karla village is near Wardha, famous for Mahatma Gandhis ashram. The Center of Science for Villages (CSV), an organization inspired by Gandhis vision that Indias strength lies in the strength of its villages, operates the village system in Karla. Today, this project derives income from compost and fish sold to local villagers, and from spirulina sold in Bombay. The CSV has distributed spirulina cookies and noodles to local children with great success, and chapatis are another local favorite. Since algae grown on waste nutrients must be proven safe to consume, it was important to show pathogens in the original human and animal waste were destroyed in the biogas digester and solar sterilizer. A six month study showed pathogens were virtually eliminated and were lower than in other local foods.
8.5. Dr. Ripley Fox and assistants discussing cultivation in Karla, India.
Undernourished children take spirulina as a daily supplement at the health clinic. The head nurse tells the mothers about its benefits. One tablespoon a day mixed with water brings remarkable results.
137
8.6. Tending the growing basin in Farende, Togo, 1989. Solar dryer in background.
136
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Children find the taste of this green medicine acceptable and within a week begin to show signs of health improvement and gain weight. Mothers from the surrounding countryside brought their children every week to participate in a clinical feeding study in 1989.
8.9. The people of Farende, Togo. (Photocollage by R. Henrikson). From 1984 to 1990, the Foxes assisted the Eglise Evangelique du Togo in building this experimental system, operated by two young village men appointed by the elders. Also cooperating was the U.S. Peace Corps, teaching people about soil composting, vegetable gardening, conservation and growing trees. The first corporate sponsors were DIC of Japan and Earthrise Company of California.
The hot arid coast of Peru with its poor land and scarce fresh water is a typical climate for spirulina. San Clemente is a new town near Pisco, its population swelling from 10,000 to 40,000 in less than five years. The town, perpetually broke, did not have sufficient funds for a sanitation or water system for the shantytown. This integrated system was funded by ACMA, private donations from France, and the Earthrise Company. The mayor and towns people, the Cooperacion Popular and members of the French embassy opened the project in 1987. Plans were made to distribute algae through the local canteens to slum children whose parents could not feed them properly. Unfortunately, due to the political chaos, civil war and local unrest, work was halted at the close of 1988.
139
138
EARTH FOOD
The worlds largest spirulina nutrition program with 5,000 children was finished in 1992. Children near Madras consumed one gram a day for 150 days. This small amount provided the daily requirement of beta carotene (Vitamin A) which helps prevent blindness and eye disease. A symptom of Vitamin A deficiency, Bitots spot, a scarring of the conjunctiva of the eye, decreased from 80% to 10%.6 Spirulina was given to children in extruded noodles, sweetened with sugar to preserve beta carotene. Called Spiru-Om, it was well accepted by the children. This project was sponsored by the Indian government and was lead by Dr. C.V. Seshadri of the Murugappa Chettiar Research Center in Madras. It is hoped this program can be extended to other districts in India.
8.10. Dr. C.V. Seshadri, with Dr. Ripley Fox and R. Henrikson, 1993.
One goal of the program was to provide an alternative to the current Vitamin A therapy, giving massive doses of imported pure Vitamin A every six months to children.
8-11. A spoonful of Spiru-Om noodles is given to a small child. (Courtesy of C.V. Seshadri 6)
The All India Coordinated Project on Algae began in 1976 to harness algae as biofertilizer and to cultivate it for human nutrition and animal feed at both commercial and rural levels. Original work began with scenedesmus, green algae, but later, spirulina was chosen because of its advantages. In 1991, the Indian government launched large scale nutritional studies. To demonstrate national interest, the Ministry of Health issued official standards for food grade spirulina. India may be the only country in the world conducting a joint effort by many government agencies covering all aspects of spirulina, from simple cultivation basins to large scale commercial farms. The government has sponsored large scale nutrition studies with animals and humans and has investigated therapeutic uses.8
141
8.12. Home cultivation and harvesting in a village in Tamil Nadu, India. (Courtesy of C.V. Seshadri 6)
140
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Four volcanic lakes with natural spirulina blooms were studied beginning in 1984. Production began at Twin Taung Lake in 1988, and by 1999 increased to 100 tons per year. About 60% is harvested from boats on the surface of the lake, and about 40% is grown in outdoor ponds alongside the lake. During the blooming season in the summer, when spirulina forms thick mats on the lake, people in boats collect a dense concentration of spirulina in buckets.
Spirulina is harvested on parallel inclined filters, washed with fresh water, detwatered and pressed again. This paste is extruded into noodle like filaments which are dried in the sun on transparent plastic sheets. Dried chips are taken to a pharmaceutical factory in Yangon, pasteurized, and pressed into tablets. Almost the entire production is distributed inside the country. Millions bottles of locally grown tablets have been sold in Myanmar. People report improvements in the intelligence of children, fertility of couples, faster wound healing, increased mental awareness, more energy for older people, acceleration of immune response, and even better meditation practices for monks and nuns.9 By adding growing ponds along the lakes and installing a more efficient harvest and drying system, Myanmar has the ability to become an even larger world producer.
142
8.13. Harvesting with buckets from the lake. (Courtesy of Min Thein 9) 8.14. Spirulina poured into cloth cones for dewatering.
In Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, in 1990, doctors conducted nutrition trials in two orphanages. Food formulas containing 5% spirulina had a better effect than soya at much lower levels.11 In a bush hospital in Zaire in 1990, spirulina in corn flower cookies improved health of children with severe protein-energy malnutrition.12 In the Central African Republic in 1992, a clinic treated 200 children a day, improving the health of those with kwashiorkor and marasmus.13 In Rwanda in 1993, children with kwashiorkor were given algae at a dispensary. After 15 days, their mothers wanted to buy spirulina and learn how to grow it in their village.14 Mothers and children around the world are embracing spirulina. In this coming decade we hope to witness an even more rapid acceptance to benefit the next generation.
143
6.15-16. Baby saved from malnutrition by spirulina, before and after in Togo, West Africa.
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Chapter 9
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
An International Space Station to be built by NASA and collaborating national space agencies is underway. The permanent manned space station design originally incorporated a Controlled Ecological Life Support System (CELSS), providing oxygen and food for humans living in space and recycling the wastes. Because early designs left limited room for plants, scientists looked at microalgae.
Early experiments demonstrated shrimp and mice could live in a completely sealed environment with a food supply. Algae consume carbon dioxide exhaled by the shrimp and mice, and exhale oxygen for them to breathe. These experiments proved algae can make enough oxygen to keep animals alive in a small, closed system.1 Algae have a higher photosynthetic efficiency, releasing more oxygen and producing more food than any other plant. Nutrients will come from the carbon dioxide exhaled by humans and recycled human and food wastes. This solves the problem of disposing of wastes during space travel. Rapid growing algae turn waste into purified water, nutritious food and oxygen sufficient to support humans. NASA-Ames Laboratory and the National Aerospace Lab in Japan proposed a food production system using spirulina and chlorella in a photosynthetic gas exchanger2. Wastes are heated to very high temperatures, turning them from semi-solids to gases. These gas
146
Kennedy Space Center used spirulina to research growing fish on space stations. More ambitious NASA plans included a self-sufficient system to grow enough algae and plant crops to permanently support humans, using special lenses and optical filters to collect sunlight in space. However, the first international space station will be less ambitious. Instead of CELSS, rockets will shuttle supplies to the station and bring back wastes to Earth. Possible life on Mars was announced in 1996 or at least it may have existed once. A dozen space probes are heading there in the next decade. Scientists are talking about terraforming the red planet so humans can colonize it. The recipe is simple. Add nitrogen and oxygen to the atmosphere; pump water to the surface; cook for decades, spicing first with cyanobacteria, then with all the rest of Earths plants and animals, adding them in the order they evolved here... Terraforming Mars would take 300 years at least.4
147
9.3. A semi-closed microalgae gas exchange experiment by the National Aerospace Laboratory of Japan (courtesy H. Shimamatsu).
EARTH FOOD
Regenerative ecological systems need the efficiencies of microalgae living at the base of the food chain, from the the closed atmosphere of a space station to the ecological cycle of a developing world village. Future solar powered communities would be designed for high productivity, simultaneously restoring the surrounding environment. Communities envisioned in Bioshelters, Ocean Arks and City Farming are coming, assert Nancy and John Todd. New biotechnologies, information, and biological components are being assembled into ecosystems capable of providing a diversity of foods in relatively small spaces.5 In 20 years, new communities can provide an alternative to land consuming suburbia or the inner city asphalt jungle. Ecological communities will use information technology and can incorporate algae production and aquaculture along with organic gardens. On a small area, productivity can be optimized, freeing up croplands for common areas or forests. An ultimate goal might be that for every acre which is farmed another would be set free.6 Many people have asked how they can grow spirulina in their own back yard. Small scale cultivation poses a real challenge. Spirulina: Production & Potential,7 by Dr. Ripley Fox, reviews the knowledge, equipment and funds needed, conditions for growth, nutrient media, growing basins, laboratory equipment, harvesting, drying and storage. The chapter on troubleshooting is 27 pages long.
148
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Large areas cannot be reforested if millions of people surrounding them cut down their forests for food and fuel. Economic opportunity zones alongside reforestation zones will be critical to the success of reforestation. In areas with depleted natural resources, microalgae can create opportunity with a fraction of the land and water as conventional crops. Several restoration projects have been proposed. Once scientists learn to successfully cultivate microalgae in seawater, new food growing areas can use 10,000 miles of accessible desert coastline in hot climates: Mexico, Peru, Chile, West, North and East Africa, Egypt and the Arabian peninsula and India. In Spirulina, Production & Potential, Dr. Ripley Fox envisions building huge seawater farms along desert coastlines.10 He proposes a network of 25 farms, 120 hectares each, providing 10 grams a day for 30 million children, the number at high risk of dying from malnutrition and related diseases. He claims the construction and operating cost would be less than one day of the 100 day Gulf War.
Using tax incentives, governments would encourage industries to collect CO2 in pressurized tanks and transport them on unused military transport ships to algae farmsites. Drying would be handled by huge solar drying tubes, 2 meters in diameter and 500 meters long. Dr. Fox suggests these farms be owned by international, humanitarian non-governmental organizations, and financed by governments by monies destined for military budgets. A network of distribution centers in malnutrition zones would distribute the dried algae.
Some of these schemes may be able to use nitrogen fixing bluegreen algae cultivated in Asian rice paddies to increase rice production. A 1981 U.N. FAO report Blue-Green Algae in Rice Production documented the possibilities of blue-green algae replacing chemical fertilizers and rebuilding the structure of depleted soils.11 In India, blue-green algae is grown in shallow earth ponds. When the water evaporates, the dried algae is scooped up and sold to rice farmers. This natural nitrogen source is only one-third the cost of chemical fertilizer and it increased annual rice yield in India and several other countries an average of 22%. Where chemical fertilizers are not used, algae gives the same benefit as 25 to 30 kg of chemical nitrogen fertilizer per acre. Where chemicals are used, algae reduces the chemical dose by the same amount. However, use of algae fertilizers in India is limited by the low cost of petrochemical fertilizers. Even more discouraging, many banks will not make loans to farmers if they dont use conventional fertilizers. Algae can also increase plant growth, such as the green algae clamadamonas, rich in polysaccharides, which help recondition soil fertility and build soil structure to retain more moisture. Algae have plant growth regulators, and by inoculating soil with algae, plant productivity can be enhanced. Scientists are looking at DNA engineering of blue-green algae to improve their nitrogen-fixing efficiency.12 Algae biofertilizers can be used for rice paddy cultivation. They can inoculate soils to increase food productivity along desert coastlines, near alkaline lakes and in villages. Used as biofertilizers, algae offer yet another way to help feed people through soil renewal, providing economic opportunity without resorting to the vicious cycle of chemical fertilizers, soil exhaustion, and dependence on imports.
151
Each farm would have twelve 10 hectare ponds lined with plastic film to make them watertight. Floating paddlewheels circulating the ponds would be powered by nearby solar ponds producing electrical energy, a technology pioneered in Israel. The main nutrient, carbon dioxide gas, would be recovered from fuel-fired power, chemical and heavy industries that normally release into the atmosphere.
150
EARTH FOOD
Most scientists agree several actions can halt the buildup of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere: 1) stop adding chlorofluorcarbons (CFCs) to the atmosphere to halt ozone layer depletion and global warming; 2) restrict methane and carbon dioxide emissions which contribute to global warming; 3) stop destroying forests and coral reefs because their stored carbon is released into the atmosphere; 4) limit human and livestock populations that stress the carrying capacity of the natural environment; and 5) plant forests to remove carbon from the atmosphere to be stored in trees and to release oxygen. A novel idea is raising ocean productivity to remove massive amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Phytoplankton absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide. Some scientists proposed enriching the ocean with iron particles. This would stimulate algae blooms and photosynthetic plant growth which fixes carbon in organic forms, leading to eventual storage as minerals in coral reefs.13 In a dramatic experiment in 1996, researchers spread 1000 pounds of iron particles across nearly 30 square miles of ocean near the Galapagos Islands. In a single week we created a new world in the middle of the ocean. We turned a patch of clear blue ocean water into a big green hayfield, just like going from a desert to forest. The plankton consumed more than 4 millions pounds of carbon from the atmosphere.14 However, scientists remained skeptical of dumping iron all across the worlds oceans because of unpredictable effects on global ecology and because it might still prove ineffective at cleaning enough carbon dioxide to slow down global warning significantly. We are discovering ways we can work with the original photosynthetic life form to restore this planet. As this new vision of the world unfolds, the few ideas mentioned here will blossom. Earths biosphere depends on the balance of gases in the atmosphere, as described by James Lovelock in his Gaia theory. He believes how we grow food has the greatest impact on planetary ecological decline. Bad farming is probably the greatest threat to Gaias health. We use close to 75 percent of the fertile land of the temperate and tropical regions for agriculture.
152
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Procession
Spirulina speaks to the human species, on behalf of the first species algae.
We, the oldest algae, began photosynthesis at our greatest moment in evolution to initiate the unfolding of life. We can assist you, for we have a fundamental role to play. Sometime in the future, you will look back at these next 20 years. The transformation of your attitude toward your body, your species and your planet will seem to have been remarkably rapid. This wonderful adventure will be the most magnificent and creative moment of your evolution in becoming fully human. Understanding your evolution is so simple yet so profound. In realizing what harm you have done to our planet will come your liberation from the past and your greatest gift to life. You will understand your role is not to control, but to participate with nature. We are all composed of the same elementary particles dating from the beginning of creation. Your human form is yet another alignment of particles which dance together with all particles. Rejoice in your connection with all life. In rediscovering your relationship with the natural world, you will heal yourself and our planet. We are excited for your opportunity in these next 20 years. Now go forth and express yourselves and participate fully in the beauty, the wonder and the glory of our unfolding creation.
154
155
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Appendix A
Australia Bahamas Belgium Canada China Croatia Ecuador Finland Greece Haiti India Ireland Jamaica Korea Luxembourg Mexico Netherlands Norway Poland Russia Slovenia Sweden Thailand Ukraine Venezuela Zaire
157
Austria Bangladesh Brazil Chad Colombia Czech Republic Egypt France Guam Hong Kong Iceland Israel Japan K u w a i t Macedonia Myanmar New Zealand Peru Portugal Saudi Arabia South Africa Switzerland Togo United Kingdom Vietnam Zimbabwe
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
A.1.
Criteria
Moisture Bacteriological: Standard plate count Mold Yeast Coliforms Salmonella Staphylococcus Heavy Metals: Lead Arsenic Cadmium Mercury Insect fragments pesticides herbicides additives preservatives dyes stabilizers artificial ingredients fillers
Japanb
< 7% <200,000/ g < 100 / g < 40 / g neg. neg. neg. < 1.0 < 1.0 < 0.05 < 0.05 ppm ppm ppm ppm * neg. neg. neg. neg. neg. neg. neg. neg.
a. Published by Earthrise Farms, 1995. b. Published by Dainippon Ink & Chemicals, Inc., Japan. c. U.S. Food and Drug Administration guideline.
definitions: < = less than * = no set standard / g = per gram neg. = negative
158
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
A.2.
microbiological quality requirements of France, Sweden, Japan and Earthrise Farms (USA)
Standard
Moisture * * <7 % <7 % Standard Plate Count <100,000/g 1,000,000/g <200,000/g <200,000/g Mold * <1000/g * <100/g Yeast * * * < 40/g Coliform <10/g <100/g neg. neg. Salmonella neg. neg. * neg. Staph <100/g <100/g * neg.
a. Superior Public Hygiene Council of France, 1984, 1986. b. Ministry of Health, Sweden. c. Japan Health Foods Association, auth. by Ministry of Health and Welfare. d. Earthrise Farms, 1995.
Spirulina has about 4% nucleic acids (DNA and RNA), lower than chlorella and other microalgae, yeast and fungi (6-11%). Although there was once some concern that eating microalgae might increase uric acid levels because of the nucleic acids, there is little evidence to support this. In fact, one study found that uric acid levels did not increase in humans taking up to 30 grams a day of chlorella protein (50 grams of chlorella).10 Since spirulina is lower in nucleic acid content, eating up to 50 grams a day is safe as well, and means it can be safely used as major protein source.11 Published studies from independent laboratories around the world confirm the absence of any toxic effects even when it provides a significant amount of dietary protein.12,13,14 Since its introduction as a human food in 1979, its success has confirmed the work of the earlier animal studies. Spirulina has been safely consumed by millions of people in North and South America, Asia, Europe and Africa.
160
161
Spirulina
Lead Mercury Cadmium Arsenic < (less than) parts per million (ppm) Aquatic Animals
(U.S. Food and Drug Admin.)
The Natural Products Quality Assurance Alliance (NPQAA) and The Natural Nutritional Foods Association (NNFA)
Spirulina is a blue-green microalga. Spirulina is cultivated in specially designed artificial ponds, harvested, dried and packaged in accordance with Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP), and quality controlled at each stage of the production process. According to the U.S. FDA (Talk Paper 6/23/82): as a food, spirulina can be legally marketed as long as it is labeled accurately and contains no contaminated or adulterated substances.
<1.0 <0.1 - -
- <1.0 - -
Legal Definition
(Japan Health Foods Assn) total heavy metals: < 20.0 ppm
Spirulina Spirulina
- -
<1.0
*<0.05
*<0.05
A.4.
Lead Mercury Cadmium mcg (micrograms) per day UN World Health Organization / Food & Agriculture Org. 500 Earthrise Spirulina (10 gm per day) mcg of heavy metals: <10 percent of UN Guidelines: <2% 50 <0.5 <1% 66-83 <0.5 <1%
Analysis Method AOAC AOAC modified AOAC modified DIC method AOAC (microbio. assay) AOAC AOAC
FDA Bacteriological Manual FDA Bacteriological Manual FDA Bacteriological Manual FDA Bacteriological Manual FDA Bacteriological Manual FDA Bacteriological Manual
162
163
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
The Natural Products Quality Assurance Alliance (NPQAA) and The Natural Nutritional Foods Association (NNFA)
For USA human consumption only, testing of each production lot is required. *US FDA Guideline acceptance criteria. 1. Insect fragments *less than150/50g AOAC (1990) 15th ed. 2. Rodent hairs *1.0/100g AOAC 990.09 Heavy Metals. Shown by a typical analysis of spirulina: 1. Lead less than 2.5 ppm AOAC 2. Arsenic less than 1.0 ppm AOAC 3. Cadmium less than 0.5 ppm AOAC 4. Mercury less than 0.05 ppm AOAC Supplementary Guidelines. Shown by a typical analysis of spirulina: 1. No pesticides 4. No preservatives 2. No herbicides 5. No stabilizers 3. No dyes 6. No irradiation
A.5. Quality and Safety Standards for Spirulina for the USA Natural Foods Industry
Extraneous Materials.
e/ B
d*
lad
a (M
Afr ica /
Me xic o
Tai wa n
ia /
ilan
Vie tna
S.A m/
an
Ch in
Cu b
Th a
Ind
A/
A/ US
rm
Ca lifo rn
yan
Year 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
Jap
Bu
Minimum Nutritional Content. To be determined. Moisture. Acceptance criteria for each production lot:
6. Moisture 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
less than 7%
AOAC
less than 200,000/g less than 100/g less than 40/g less than 3/g negative negative
FDA Bacteriological Manual FDA Bacteriological Manual FDA Bacteriological Manual FDA Bacteriological Manual FDA Bacteriological Manual FDA Bacteriological Manual
Producers of finished products shall determine nutrient statements on labels based on both bulk spirulina powder analysis and nutrient changes due to tableting and bottling and package shelf life.
30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 0 30 4 30 12 30 15 30 20 30 25 30 30 30 60 30 80 30 100
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 5 5 7 20 40 40 40
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 10 20 40 40 50 50
0 5 11 20 20 20 30 35 45 47 53 60 60 60 50 35 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
0 45 65 145 200 245 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 225 100 0 0 0 20 20
0 0 0 1 50 50 50 60 60 75 100 110 110 110 110 120 120 120 120 130 150 150 150 150 150
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 4 4 6 0 0 0 3 5 8 10 10 10 10
US
0 0 0 0 1 1 1 20 50 55 55 55 70 70 70 120 160 160 160 210 370 480 500 400 400
164
165
Ha wa ii
Ch a
Ch il
Ba
ng
ia
Total 50 80 110 200 310 360 380 420 450 520 560 590 630 660 670 740 790 830 830 910 1240 1760 2200 2300 2450
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Appendix B
Larry Switzer had been looking for new solutions. He discovered microalgae was 20 times more productive as a protein source than any other food. It could be grown with unused land and water. It was possible to cultivate a pure culture on a large scale in many places around the world.
Scientists discovered spirulina was a safe food, had been consumed for hundreds of years by traditional peoples, and showed promising nutritional, even therapeutic, health benefits. If this blue-green algae were cultivated and consumed by millions of people, it would have tremendous benefits especially for the worlds children and our planets future. It seemed to be a solution we needed. However, it was all theory it hadn't been done yet! No one had yet successfully cultivated spirulina on a large scale, produced it as a safe food, and convinced anyone they should Spirulina article indeed eat algae! If it was an idea whose time B.2. by Eric Perlman, San had come, it was, nonetheless, a daunting Francisco Examiner, 1977. task.
166 167
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Larry first tried to convince the government of Nigeria to build spirulina farms along Lake Chad where it was already growing naturally. But at that time, Nigerians were preoccupied with developing oil. They questioned if anyone in America was eating this algae. If not, why should poor Africans eat it? They were right. Clearly, to promote algae to the worlds hungry people, we first needed to demonstrate its remarkable health benefits to the developed world, and establish it as a valuable new food for everyone. With this in mind, Larry and Robert left the comforts of Berkeley for Californias hot Imperial Valley in early 1977. This desert climate was ideal for growing spirulina, and was far from urban pollution. We were joined by a lake ecologist from Berkeley, Dr. Alan Jassby, who helped design the early systems and cultivation programs.
B.3. Our trailer. B.4. The farm site, with bottles of live spirulina culture.
However, innovative projects are not easy, and this was no exception. For three years this small entrepreneurial team sweated in the desert to build a successful farm model. Just about everything that could go wrong, did go wrong, and every problem had to be overcome.
168
B.5. Growing up the culture in small trays and wading pools. B.6. Celebrating the inoculation of a larger pond.
Was this flood a message? Naturally, this setback caused us to reconsider our strategy. If growing spirulina was going to be so difficult, why not just harvest wild blue-green algae from lakes, where its already growing? We investigated the feasibility of lake harvest schemes. Once again, we redoubled our efforts to cultivate spirulina, for three reasons: 1. Spirulina could be scientifically controlled for a safe product. Natural lakes had mixed blooms of algae throughout the year which we could not control. Some blue-green algae, like some plants, are toxic. We were concerned about producing a contaminated food, and became even more convinced that we needed a scientifically controlled spirulina bluegreen algae farm to assure safe food. 2. Spirulina production could improve world food and environmental problems. Harvesting wild algae from lakes would not likely develop into a global business capable of changing world food problems. Cultivating spirulina sustainably and ecologically meant producing food at phenomenally high growth rates. We believed if early bioneers were successful, algae farming would spread all over the world. This would have tremendous economic and environmental impact. 3. Spirulina could gain the support of the world scientific community. Scientists have minimal interest in potentially toxic bluegreen algae, such as microcystis, anabaena or aphanizomenon flos-aquae. In contrast, over the past 30 years there has been an explosion of published scientific studies on safe spirulina and chlorella. We realized without the support of world scientists to show the medical community reputable research, algae would not become an accepted world food. In fact, almost all reported medical and health claims made for blue-green algae are based on 20 years of scientific research on spirulina.
169
Should we cultivate spirulina in algae farms or harvest blue-green algae from lakes?
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Building the Second Prototype Farm
We asked our investors for more funding, relocated, and started a second farm. Ron Henson showed up to help with construction, and eventually became the Operations Manager of the current Earthrise Farms. Today he is a Vice-President of Earthrise and Sales Manager of the Animal Health Global Sales.
B.8. Second farm in 1979. B.9. Larry Switzer, Bruce Carlson, Ron Henson, Robert Henrikson.
We developed larger growing ponds, tested harvesting and drying operations, and felt confident that we could build a commercial size farm. Then we began looking for a new funding source, several million dollars. To interest investors, we now had to prove we could actually sell algae to someone. We began importing spirulina, and developed a partnership with a Japanese company that had just begun growing it in Thailand.
B.14. Harvested paste has a mild taste. B.15. Fresh paste and spray dried powder.
B.12. A paddlewheel circulates water around a pond. B.13. Tasting wet spirulina freshly harvested.
A new planetary idea often incarnates through many messengers. This was true with spirulina. While Earthrise was underway in California, other companies began cultivation around the world. Hubert DurandChastel, now a Senator of France, encouraged a Mexican company to set up a farm in Lake Texcoco in the 1970s. Israeli, Indian and European scientists began cultivation research. Others developed village scale and appropriate technology farms, notably Dr. Ripley D. Fox of France, and Dr. C.V. Sesahdri of India. Other bioneers emerged in their respective countries. In Thailand in 1980, A Japanese company, Dainippon Ink & Chemicals (DIC), built one of the first farms. This global company with $10 billion in sales and a commitment to developing microalgae for food, biochemicals and pharmaceuticals, was led by visionaries who were fascinated with its potential. The former President, Shigekuni Kawamura and current President, Takemitsu Takahashi, are long time spirulina sponsors, and funded development. Heading up the program was Mr. Spirulina in Japan, Hidenori Shimamatsu of DIC Bio Division.
171
Fortunately we were not alone. Many other algae bioneers emerged around the world.
170
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
In 1978, we chose the name Earthrise as our trademark and symbol. Apollo astronauts witnessed the first Rising of the Earth from the moon's surface in 1969. This powerful image represents our awakening to the miracle of our living planet. We rediscovered that blue-green algae, the original photosynthetic life form, offers remarkable health benefits to ourselves, our society and our planet today. We dedicated these gifts to a new awareness of our Earth Rising.
We established Earthrise as a sales company directed by Robert Bellows and Terry Cohen of Boulder, Colorado. Earthrise began appearing in natural food stores in 1979. Spirulina gained popularity fast. In 1981, the National Enquirer pronounced it a magic diet pill, and consumer demand exploded overnight. Many diet pill companies jumped on the bandwagon, and sold spirulina diet pills that didn't even contain any. There wasn't much real spirulina yet being grown. The diet boom faded by 1983, but the market began to grow again by 1987. More people experienced health benefits from spirulina. More published scientific research documented its therapeutic benefits. As President since 1981, I sold the Earthrise sales company to DIC in 1988 to begin a dynamic new growth phase. With a injection of financial resources, we rapidly expanded. Earthrise trademark products are now sold in 40 countries, making it the worlds best selling spirulina.
172
B.17. Earthrise tablets were first introduced 1979. B.18. Earthrise people , 1981.
In following years, as funding was needed for expansion, Earthrise Farms became a subsidiary of DIC. Under the leadership of Yoshimichi Ota, President since 1984, the farm expanded in size, and quality assurance. Dr. Amha Belay from Ethiopia, land of spirulina lakes, is the Senior V.P., and has been responsible for cultivation, and research. Juan Chavez, V.P. and Production Manager, expanded the production capacity to 500 tons a year by 1996. Its been quite a journey over 20 years, from buckets of algae to the worlds largest spirulina farm as a dream became reality.
B.21-24. Earthrise Farms expansion showing new pond area: 1985, 88, 90, 95.
173
174
175
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
6. National Research Council. Diet, Nutrition and Cancer. National Academy Press, Washington DC, 1982. 7. Switzer, Larry. Spirulina, The Whole Food Revolution. Bantam Books, NY, 1982, p. 39. 8. Hills, Christopher, Phd. Rejuvenating the Body Through Fasting With Spirulina Plankton. Univ. of the Trees, Boulder Creek, CA, 1979, p. 9. 9. Hills, p. 22. 10. Switzer, Larry. Spirulina, The Whole Food Revolution. Bantam, NY, 1982, p. 40. 11. Gray, Robert. The Colon Health Handbook. New Health Through Colon Regeneration. 11th Ed. Emerald Publishing, PO Box 11830, Reno NV, 1986, p. 13. 12. Gray, p. 36-7. 13. Gray, p. 40. 14. Spirulina: For a high intensity workout. Flex, Sep. 1984, p. 61. 15. Bellows, Robert. Spirulina: Nature's Magic Algae. Muscle and Fitness, 1983, p 83-4. 16. Garcia, A.M. Spirulina makes me ten times stronger, like spinach for Popeye. Gramme International. Sep. 96. p. 11. 17. Spirulina & Pregnancy. Body & Soul. Vol. VIII, No.13, p. 8. 18. Spirulina for Nursing Mothers. Ballarpur Industries, Ltd., Thapur House, 124, Janpath, New Delhi, India. 19. Dainippon Ink & Chemicals, Inc. Customer Survey, 1988. 20. Nutrition of the Future: Foods that Fight Aging. Business Week, Oct. 9, 1988, 125-6.
Latest scientific research: effects on AIDS virus, cancer and the immune system
1. Ayehunie, S., Belay, A. et al. Inhibition of HIV-1 replication by an aqueous extract of spirulina platensis (Arthospira platensis). Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes and Human Retrovirology, 18:7-12. USA 1998. 2. Hayashi, T. et al. Calcium Spirulan, an inhibitor of enveloped virus replication, from a blue-green alga spirulina. Am. Chemical Soc. and Am. Soc. of Pharmacognosy. Journal of Natural Products, 1996. Vol 59, No. 1, p. 83-87. 3. Hayashi, K. et al. An extract from spirulina is a selective inhibitor of herpes simplex virus Type 1 penetration into HeLa cells. Phytotherapy Research, Vol. 7, p.76-80, 1993. 4. Hayashi, O. et al. Enhancement of antibody production in mice by dietary spirulina. J. of Nutritional Sciences and Vitaminology, 40, p. 431-441, 1994. 5. Belay, A., Ota, Y. et al. Current knowledge on potential health benefits of spirulina. Journal of Applied Phycology. 1993. 5:235-241. 6. Carmichael, W. et al. The toxins of cyanobacteria. Scientific American, Jan. 1995.
Cholesterol reduction
. 7 Nayaka, N. et al. Cholesterol lowering effect of spirulina. Tokai Univ, Japan. Nutrition Reports Int'l, June 1988, Vol 37, No. 6, 1329-1337. Nakaya, N. Effect of spirulina on reduction of serum cholesterol. Tokai Univ. Progress in Med. Nov. 1986, Vol 6, No. 11. 8. Becker, E.W. et al. Clinical and biochemical evaluations of spirulina with regard to its application in the treatment of obesity. Inst. Chem. Pfanz. Nutrition Reports International, April 1986, Vol. 33, No. 4, p. 565. 9. Devi, M.A. and Venkataraman, L.V. Hypocholesterolemic effect of blue-green algae spirulina platensis in albino rats. Nutrition Reports International, 1983, 28:519-530. 10. Kato, T. and Takemoto, K. Effects of spirulina on hypercholesterolemia and fatty liver in rats. Saitama Med. College, Japan. Japan Nutr Foods Assoc. Jour. 1984, 37:321. 11. Iwata, K. et al. Effects of spirulina on plasma lipoprotein lipase activity in rats. Journal Nutr. Sci. Vitaminol. 1990, 36:165-171.
176
177
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
32. Belay, A., Henson, R., Ota, Y. Potential Pharmaceutical Substances from Aquaculturally Produced Spirulina. Earthrise Farms, Calipatria CA. Presented to World Aquaculture Society, New Orleans. Jan. 1994.
70. Becker, E.W. et al. Clinical and biochemical evaluations of the alga spirulina with regard to its application in the treatment of obesity. Inst. Chem. Pfanzenphysiologie. Nutrition Reports International, April 1986, Vol. 33, No 4, 565.
178
179
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
180
181
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Resource guide
Fox, Ripley D. Spirulina, production and potential.1996. To order: Editions Edisud, La Calade, R.N.7, 13090 Aix-en-Provence, France. Fax: 33 42 21 56 20. Laboratoire de la Roquette. c/o Dr. Ripley D. Fox, 34190 St. Bauzille-de-Putois, France. Richmond, Amos. Spirulina. Micro-Algal Biotechnology. ed. by Borowitska. Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, UK, 1988. Vonshak, A. and Richmond A. Mass Production of the blue-green algae spirulina: an overview. Biomass, 1988, p. 233-247. Jassby, Alan. Some public health aspects of microalgal products. Algae and Human Affairs, ed. by Lembi and Waaland. Cambridge Univ. Press, 1988, p. 181-202. Venkataraman, L.V. and Becker, E.W. Biotechnology & Utilization of Algae- The Indian Experience. Sharada Press, Mangalore, India. Hawken, Paul, Amory & L. Hunter Lovins. Natural Capitalism. Little Brown, NY. 1999. Hawken, Paul. The Ecology of Commerce. Harper Collins, New York. 1993. Capra, Fritjof. The Web of Life. Anchor Books Doubleday. New York 1996. Ausubel, Kenny. Seeds of Change: The Living Treasure. Harper San Francisco. 1994. Ausubel, Kenny. Restoring the Earth. H.J.Kramer Tiburon, CA. 1997. Nattrass B & Altomare M. The Natural Step for Business. New Society BC Canada. 1999. Wilson, Edward O. The Diversity of Life. W.W. Norton, New York. 1992. Utne Reader Magazine. Minneapolis, MN. Worldwatch Institute. State Of The World. 1999. W.W. Norton & Company. NY, 1999. World Resources Yearbook. World Resources Inst., Basic Books, NY, 1993. Food First. Institute for Food and Development Policy, 145 Ninth St., San Francisco, CA. National Resources Defense Council (NRDC), 40 West 20th St., New York, NY 10011. Greenpeace, 1436 U Street N.W., PO Box 3720, Washington, DC 20007. Conservation International, 1015 18th Street, N.W., Suite 1000, Washington, DC, 20036. Rainforest Action Network, 221 Pine Street, Suite 500, San Francisco, CA 94104. The Hunger Project. Ending Hunger: An Idea Whose Time Has Come. Praeger, NY, 1985. Gaia, An Atlas of Planet Management. ed by Dr. Norman Myers. Doubleday, NY, 1984. Swimme Brian &Berry, Thomas. The Universe Story. Harper, San Francisco, 1992. Berry, Thomas. The Dream of the Earth. Sierra Club, San Francisco, 1988.
Other References
182
183
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
Index
AIDS, 6, 7, 39, 61, 62, 63, 66, 70, 72, 73, 75, 78, 94, 96, 150 agriculture, 11, 22, 23, 26, 119, 125, 127, 128, 132, 136, 148, 153 alcohol, 37, 45, 52, 58, 77 allergies, 70, 159 amino acids, 16, 25, 28-30, 66, 106 anemia, 34, 35, 38, 55, 56, 66, 70, 76, 78, 92, 132 animal studies, 54, 62, 63, 64, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 74, 75, 159, 160 antibiotics, 7, 48, 72, 96, 118, 122 antioxidants, 7, 8, 33, 38, 40, 58, 95 anti-viral, 61-63, 70 aphanizomenon flos-aquae, 15, 16, 40, 41, 99, 107, 108 Apollo astronauts, 172 arthrospira, 16, 163 athletes, 43, 55, 83 Aztecs, 11, 20 barley grass, 40, 41, 83 Belarus Institute of Radiation Medicine, 78 beta carotene, 31-33, 38, 39, 41, 52, 57, 58, 68, 69, 95, 96, 108, 132, 140, 141 biofertilizers, 16, 141, 145, 151 bioreactors, 99, 109, 112, 113 blood, 36, 38, 50, 51, 55, 57, 58, 62, 64, 65, 66, 70, 72, 74, 77, 79, 94; red cells, 34, 35, 65, 66, 71, 76, 92; white cells, 65, 66, 71, 92 blue-green algae, 14, 15, 17, 20, 39, 40, 71, 73, 83, 94, 99, 107, 108, 115, 147, 151, 163; colonizing oceans, 13; role in atmospheric gases, 11; fixing nitrogen, 16; fossils, 12 bodybuilders, 55 brine shrimp, 88, 90 calcium, 27, 35, 36, 41, 46, 48, 57, 62 calcium-spirulan, 62, 72 calories, 31, 37, 47, 49, 53 cancer, 7, 32, 33, 43, 52, 54, 58, 61, 62, 63, 65, 66, 68-70, 71, 73, 74, 78, 92, 94, 96, 122, 159 candida albicans, 66 carbohydrates, 27, 34, 39, 41, 46, 47, 129 carbon dioxide, 14, 12, 13, 55, 102, 114, 120, 126, 134, 146, 147, 149, 152, 153 carotenoids, 32, 33, 38, 39 41, 69, 90, 163 Chernobyl, 66, 78 children, 31, 34, 35, 43, 56, 66, 76, 78-79, 127, 131, 132, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 149, 159 chlorella, 14, 15, 33, 34, 36, 38, 40, 41, 82, 83, 93, 99, 107, 111, 146, 160, 162 chlorophyll, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 53, 66, 93, 163 cholesterol, 28, 31, 32, 37, 43, 46, 50, 51, 52, 61, 67, 70, 77 comparisons of green superfoods, 41, 99, 107, 108 constipation, 54, 57, 76 cosmetics, 81, 93 cyanobacteria, 12-14, 108, 147 Daily Value, 27, 32, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38 degenerative diseases, 40, 43, 71, 77, 122 detoxification, 53 diabetes, 56, 57, 70, 74, 76 diarrhea, 76 diet, 25, 28, 33, 35, 37, 43, 45-59, 67, 68, 69, 76, 77, 83, 91, 119, 120, 123, 129, 132, 137 dih, 17, 18, 159 digestion, 35, 45, 46, 48, 54, 57, 75, 107 Dainippon Ink & Chemicals, 78, 93, 110, 158 DNA, 13, 63, 94, 115, 151, 160 dunaliella, 15, 99, 107, 108, 110 Durand-Chastel, Hubert, 171 e. coli, 66 Earthrise Farms, 29, 32, 33, 35, 36, 37, 39, 41, 62, 71, 73, 95, 96, 100-106, 108, 110, 125, 122, 124, 126, 133, 147, 158, 160, 161, 162 Earthrise Company, 78, 82, 133, 139 environment, 13, 22, 23, 59, 68, 101, 119, 124, 128, 129, 137, 148, 153, 161 enzymes, 37, 38, 39, 63, 74, 81, 94, 95, 104, 105, 106, 115 erythropoetin (EPO), 65, 71 eukaryotes, 14 essential fatty acids, 25, 37, 41, 77, 90, 96, 132 exercise, 46, 47, 48, 50, 51 fasting, 43, 53, 54, 74 fat(s), 28, 31, 37, 43, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 52, 55, 56, 57, 67, 77 fiber, 46, 48, 50, 52, 53, 54 fish, 29, 30, 31, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 64, 67, 81, 83, 87-90, 96, 115, 134, 147, 159 fertility, 15, 91, 92, 142, 159 flamingos, 11, 17, 21, 90 fluorescent markers 81, 94 Fox, Dr. Ripley, 114, 133, 136, 138, 139, 140, 149 free radicals, 39, 58, 68, 95 gamma-linolenic acid (GLA), 26, 37, 41, 51, 55, 56, 66, 70, 77, 96, 163 global warming, 12, 129, 126, 152 glycogen, 39 glycolipids, 37, 38, 39, 41, 73 heart disease, 43, 50, 67, 77, 122 heavy metals, 70, 74, 97, 106, 109, 158, 159, 161, 162, 164 hemoglobin, 38, 55, 76 herbicides, 49, 101, 102, 105, 118, 122, 124, 158, 164 herpes, 62, 70, 72 HIV, 61, 62, 72 73, see also AIDS hypertension, 67, 74 hypoglycemia, 39 immune system, 35, 38, 55, 61, 62 , 64-65, 71, 72, 73, 75, 76, 78, 88, 92, 95, 105, 141 immunofluoresence, 97 iron, 12, 13, 26, 27, 35, 36, 38, 41, 47, 55, 56, 57, 70, 76, 95, 103, 132, 152 Kanembu, 11, 17, 18, 19, 75 kidneys, 46, 65, 70, 71, toxicity, 61, 74 kwashiorkor, 31, 143 lactobacillus, 54, 56, 57, 61, 66, 70, 75 Lake Texcoco, 20-21, 109 lipids, 27, 37, 39, 41, 73, 96 macroalgae, 15 magnesium, 35, 36, 38, 41, 51, 56, 57 malnutrition, 26, 31, 32, 56, 57, 61, 70, 75, 76 Mars, 147 microalgae, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 23, 82, 95, 100, 107, 108, 112, 129, 132, 145, 147, 148, 153, 160 minerals, 17, 25-27, 33, 35, 36, 41, 48, 51, 58, 68, 76, 77, 83, 90, 95, 96, 102, 103, 106, 121, 129, 132, 134, 152 National Academy of Science, 43 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), 146 National Cancer Institute, (NCI) 8, 43, 52, 68, 73, 96 Net Protein Utilization (NPU), 29-31 neutral lipids, 39 nursing mothers, 56, 132, 143 nutraceuticals, 7, 8, 83 obesity, 77, 90 organic certification, 105 pesticides, 23, 49, 82, 101, 102, 105, 118, 122, 124, 127, 158, 159, 164 pharmaceutical extracts, 73, 75, 94, 96, 97 phenylpropanalomine (PPA), 46 photobioreactor, 97, 112 photosynthesis, 12, 15, 132, 155 phytochemicals, 7, 27, 83, 95, 96 phytonutrients, 25, 26, 33, 37, 38, 40, 41, 61, 66, 71, 105 phycocyanin, 8, 35, 37, 38, 39, 41, 65, 71, 72, 74, 78, 93, 97, 104, 163 pigments, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 87, 94, 104, 106 pollution, 22, 68, 78, 82, 95, 100, 122, 123, 124, 128, 133, 161 polysaccharides, 8, 15, 31, 38, 39, 41, 63, 71, 72, 78, 96, 151 potassium, 35, 41, 103 pregnancy, 18, 31, 57, 132 pre-menstrual syndrome (PMS), 43, 46, 51, 83 primrose, 37, 77 probiotics, 7, 8, 72
Index
procaryotes, 12, 14, 15 processed foods, 25, 46, 82, 118, 122 prostaglandins, 37, 55, 77 protein, 23, 25, 26, 28-31, 41, 43, 54, 55, 57, 73, 97, 106, 113-115, 119, 124, 125, 132, 143, 160-163 radiation sickness, 61, 66, 78, 79 recipes, 44, 45 Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA), 95 rhamnose, 39 RNA, 160 scenedesmus, 15, 141 seniors, 35, 54, 57 soybeans, 9, 23, 26, 28, 36, 124 spirulina: antibiotic effect , 75; 123; drying, 18, 99, 104; energy booster, 34, 39, 40, 43, 44, 45, 47, 53, 54, 55, 56, 59, 92, 142; farming, 23, 99, 100-115; harvesting, 99, 103; history, 11-17; packaging, 99; pond ecology, 101; preparing, 18, 44; quality control, 99, 106; safety, 44, 62, 97, 108, 158-164; storage, 44, 59; spirulina lakes, 11, 17, 18, 20-22, 109-110, 123, 129, 131, 133, 142, 150 sulfolipids, 8, 39, 41, 73, 96, 150 super blue-green algae, see Aphanizomenom flos-aquae superfoods, 25-27, 39, 40, 41, 57, 59, 83 superoxide dismutase (SOD), 39 stem cells, 64, 65, 71 stress, 26, 51, 52, 65, 68, 77, 83, 95 sugar, 39, 43, 46, 48, 51, 57, 62, 129, 140 Switzer, Larry, 2, 23, 30, 44, 132, 133 T-cells, 64, 65, 72 toxicity, 74, 97, 108, 159 trace elements, 35, 41, 103 United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), 159 U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), 26, 93, 161, 163, 164 viruses, 7, 8, 62, 63, 72, 73, 150 vision, 32, 56, 78, 132, 140 vitamins, 17, 25, 26, 27, 32, 34, 40, 41, 48, 51, 58, 75, 83, 96, 106, 113, 115, 129, 150 vitamin A, see beta carotene vitamin B-12 and B-complex, 32, 34, 40, 41, 43, 54, 56, 75, 132, 163 vitamin E, 32, 34, 40, 58, 68 weight, 31, 35, 43, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 67, 70, 76, 77, 82, 83, 138, 143 wheat grass, 40, 41, 83 world wide web, 79 zinc, 35, 36, 41, 76, 77, 95, 105
184
185
EARTH FOOD
Spirulina
International Editions
186
187