Food and animal feed In addition to its traditional cultivation as a bio-fertilizer for wetland paddies,
Azolla is finding increasing use for sustainable production of
livestock feed.
Azolla is rich in protein, essential amino acids, vitamins, and minerals. Studies describe feeding
Azolla to
dairy cattle, pigs, ducks, and chickens, with reported increases in
milk production, weight of broiler chickens and egg production of layers, as compared to conventional feed. One
FAO study describes how
Azolla integrates into a tropical biomass agricultural system, reducing the need for food supplements.
Concerns related to BMAA Concerns about
biomagnification exist because the plant may contain the neurotoxin
β-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) that remains present in the bodies of animals consuming it, and BMAA has been documented as passing along the
food chain.
Azolla may contain this substance that is a possible cause of neurodegenerative diseases, including causing ALS, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's.
Azolla has been suggested as a foodstuff for human consumption; however, no long-term studies of the safety of eating
Azolla have been made on humans. Previous studies attributed neurotoxin production to
Anabaena flos-aquae species, which is also a type of nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria. Studies published in 2024 have found that "the Azolla–Nostoc azollae superorganism does not contain BMAA or their isomers DAB and AEG and that Azolla and N. azollae do not synthesize other common cyanotoxins." Further research may be needed to ascertain whether
A. azollae is a healthy foodstuff for humans.
Companion plant Azolla has been used for at least one thousand years in rice paddies as a
companion plant, to fix nitrogen and to block out light to prevent competition from other plants. Rice is planted when tall enough to poke through the
Azolla layer. Mats of mature
Azolla can also be used as a weed-suppressing
mulch. Rice farmers used
Azolla as a rice biofertilizer 1500 years ago. The earliest known written record of this practice is in a book written by Jia Sixie in 554 CE in
Qimin Yaoshu (
Essential Techniques for the Welfare of the People). By the end of the
Ming dynasty in the early 17th century,
Azolla's use as a green compost was documented in local records.
Larvicide The myth that no mosquito can penetrate the coating of fern to lay its eggs in the water gives the plant its common name "mosquito fern".
Paleoclimatology and climate change Azolla has been proposed as a
carbon sequestration modality. The proposal draws upon the hypothesized
Azolla event that asserts that 55 million years ago,
Azolla covered the
Arctic – at the time a hot, tropical, freshwater environment – and then sank, permanently sequestering
teratons of carbon that would otherwise have contributed to the planet's greenhouse effect. This ended a warming event that reached warmer than present-day averages, eventually causing the formation of
ice sheets in
Antarctica and the current
"icehouse period". They contribute significantly to decreasing the atmospheric CO2 levels. ==Invasive species==