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Current and Expected Trends for the Marine Chitin/Chitosan and Collagen Value Chains

Marine Drugs 2023 29 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Helena Vieira, Gonçalo Moura Lestre, Runar Gjerp Solstad, Themistoklis Altintzoglou, Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens Ana Elisa Cabral, Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens Miguel C. Leal, Johan Robbens Johan Robbens, Anabela Botelho, Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens Carlos Helbig, Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens Johan Robbens Daniela Coppola, Donatella de Pascale, Johan Robbens Johan Robbens Johan Robbens Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens Johan Robbens, Donatella de Pascale, Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens Katleen Raes, Donatella de Pascale, Johan Robbens Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens Ricardo Calado, Kjersti Lian, Kyriaki Tsirtsidou, Kyriaki Tsirtsidou, Miguel C. Leal, Johan Robbens Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens Johan Robbens, Nathalie Scheers, Ricardo Calado, Sofia Corticeiro, Stefan Rasche, Themistoklis Altintzoglou, Yang Zou, Ana I. Lillebø, Johan Robbens, Johan Robbens

Summary

This review examined current and future trends in the marine chitin/chitosan and collagen value chains, focusing on sustainable extraction from fishery by-catches and invasive species as contributions to a more circular blue bioeconomy.

Chitin/chitosan and collagen are two of the most important bioactive compounds, with applications in the pharmaceutical, veterinary, nutraceutical, cosmetic, biomaterials, and other industries. When extracted from non-edible parts of fish and shellfish, by-catches, and invasive species, their use contributes to a more sustainable and circular economy. The present article reviews the scientific knowledge and publication trends along the marine chitin/chitosan and collagen value chains and assesses how researchers, industry players, and end-users can bridge the gap between scientific understanding and industrial applications. Overall, research on chitin/chitosan remains focused on the compound itself rather than its market applications. Still, chitin/chitosan use is expected to increase in food and biomedical applications, while that of collagen is expected to increase in biomedical, cosmetic, pharmaceutical, and nutritional applications. Sustainable practices, such as the reuse of waste materials, contribute to strengthen both value chains; the identified weaknesses include the lack of studies considering market trends, social sustainability, and profitability, as well as insufficient examination of intellectual property rights. Government regulations, market demand, consumer preferences, technological advancements, environmental challenges, and legal frameworks play significant roles in shaping both value chains. Addressing these factors is crucial for seizing opportunities, fostering sustainability, complying with regulations, and maintaining competitiveness in these constantly evolving value chains.

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