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Duckweed is the fastest growing plant in the world. | Author: Pravoslav Žilka, iGEM Brno
What is your project about?We want to replace soy because up to 80% of global production is used for livestock feed. We are developing a cultivation unit that farmers can feed with manure. Thanks to the manure, duckweed grows inside the unit. The plant is harvested automatically and provides a local, protein-rich, and cheaper feed source. To make duckweed grow fast enough in this system, it needs to be genetically modified—this part is handled by our colleagues from Masaryk University.
What is your role?Together with Andrej Žabka from FME and Martin Pavell, a graduate of FIT, we are building the autonomous cultivation unit. Our goal is to grow duckweed as efficiently as possible, with minimal need for human supervision.Where is the cultivator being built?We’re building it in AssemblyLab, one of the strojLAB workshops. That’s where we spend most of our time. We owe great thanks to representatives of the Institute of Machine and Industrial Design, Martin Malý and Vojtěch Florián, who provided us with the workshop facilities.What do you gain from being part of the team?I’ve learned how to design and test new concepts, improved my skills in fundraising and public project presentation, and gained a clear idea of what’s feasible and what’s not.Like his teammate Andrej Žabka, Pravoslav Žilka is a student at FME. | Author: Pravoslav Žilka, iGEM Brno
How strong is the competition?Teams from all over the world will come to Paris—from Stanford or Oxford, for example, as well as colleagues from Prague. We regularly meet at iGEM community events, which are more friendly than competitive. Each team tackles a completely different problem.What is key to success in the competition?Choosing a real problem and finding a meaningful solution. Validation with people from practice and adapting the project based on their feedback are highly valued. And, of course, presentation plays a major role—especially the written part, since that’s what the judges primarily see.Cultivator for growing duckweed. | Author: Pravoslav Žilka, iGEM Brno
You have a crowdfunding campaign called Mendel 2.0 on Donio. What will the collected funds be used for?Primarily for the entry fee, lab facilities, and material needs—for example, those we used to build the cultivator. Supporters still have a few days left to contribute.What would you say to students who have an idea but don’t know where to start?The best thing is to talk to someone from the field, even a complete stranger. In Brno, active and enterprising people often gather around JIC—that’s a great place to meet others with similar projects.Source: FME BUT
Responsibility: Bc. Tereza Kučerová