Duckweed nutrition

Mar 18, 2020
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Fredrick County, VA
I'm planning to add a few trays of duckweed to the filtration on my duck pond. I know both my ducks and chickens enjoy it as a snack, which got me wondering about its food qualities. I've found a lot of information about it's benefits as a nutrient sink and as a protein source (Here, and here, herefor example) as well as one claim (here) about vitamin B12, but otherwise, not a lot of details. Does anyone have experience with feeding duckweed as fodder or know anything about its nutrition value?
 
Duckweed is largely non-digestable and can only replace about 15% of a complete ration. It has lots of protein but almost no Methionine. Probably a good source of vitamins. The birds like it but it should be used as a treat.
 
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Does anyone have experience with feeding duckweed as fodder or know anything about its nutrition value?
I found a research paper about using dried duckweed in diets for layer hens.
(I think it's referenced in one of the articles you linked to, but this is the actual writeup with more details.)

I think this link will go to the .pdf:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032579119329542/pdf
If that link doesn't work, try this one should go to a page with an abstract, that then has a link to download the .pdf:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032579119329542
And if that doesn't work, try googling for the title:
Duckweed, A Useful Strategy for Feeding Chickens: Performance of
Layers Fed with Sewage-Grown Lemnacea Species
(Authors are Haustetn, Gilman, Skillicorn, Vergara, and Gastanaduy)

It talks about using duckweed to replace soybeans meal and some fish meal in chicken diets. The recipe for each diet is given, with the nutritional analysis of each diet. They found reduced production when dried duckweed was 40% of the diet, but not when dried duckweed was 25% or less of the diet.

The article did mention that fresh duckweed contains large amounts of water, which limits how much a chicken can actually eat of it-- which is why they were using dried duckweed in their experiment.

Based on that, I would assume you can let your birds have as much fresh duckweed as they want, but that you probably should not expect it to make much difference in their diets (because of the high amount of water, which means low concentration of nutrients.) But as long as they also eat enough of their usual complete food, the duckweed would not cause any harm.
 
I too have a pond and thought about raising some for my birds but I've read that if you decide you don't want it in your tank anymore....too bad because it's almost impossible to get rid of so I decided to stay with my original plan of aquaponic.
 

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