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International Artemia Aquaculture Consortium

Conservation, management and sustainable utilisation of Artemia biodiversity

Global Inventory of Artemia Stakeholders: I

Browse the directory of Artemia aquaculture stakeholders and innovators alphabetically, using filter criteria, or free text search.
Data provided courtesy of the World Bank from its Global Inventory Report of Artemia Stakeholders.

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4 result(s):


I&V-Bio

I&V‑Bio is a biotech company headquartered in Thailand with operational Artemia nauplii production centers across Asia and Latin America (Thailand, India, Indonesia, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Ecuador). Their core offering is daily-supplied live or decapsulated ready-to-use Artemia nauplii, including pathogen-free, enriched variants, supported by separation, hatching, disinfection, and packaging protocols.

INVE Aquaculture

INVE Aquaculture develops Artemia-based hatchery technologies, tools, and protocols for fish and shrimp production. Their Artemia-focused innovations include techniques for efficient hatching, specialty cysts, biosecure handling (such as diapause termination and bacterial control), and enrichment through bioencapsulation. INVE maintains dedicated R&D infrastructure, including the Artemia Knowledge Hub and Hatchery Technology Centres, to test and validate these solutions under hatchery-like conditions.

Instituto de Acuicultura de Torre de la Sal, Castellon

The Instituto de Acuicultura de Torre de la Sal (IATS‑CSIC) has a dedicated research line on Artemia addressing its biology, genetics, biodiversity, parasitism, and nutritional applications as live feed. IATS hosts one of Europe’s most extensive Artemia cyst banks, with over 700 samples, and a database on Artemia occurrence and distribution. The institute has expertise in essential fatty acids, larviculture nutrition, biology/econology and aquatic toxicology.

International Artemia Aquaculture Consortium

The International Artemia Aquaculture Consortium (IAAC) is a global network of scientists, institutions and private-sector companies, established in November 2019, that works to conserve Artemia biodiversity, support sustainable harvesting of wild cysts, and ensure reliable supply chains from both wild and farmed sources. IAAC brings together over 50 institutions across more than 30 countries. Its activities include developing science‑based harvesting protocols, documenting Artemia strains, exploring strain selection and breeding, and integrating Artemia production into local socioeconomic contexts.