Sustainable Exploitation of Posidonia oceanica Sea Balls (Egagropili): A Review

Int J Mol Sci. 2023 Apr 14;24(8):7301. doi: 10.3390/ijms24087301.

Abstract

Posidonia oceanica (L.) Delile is the main seagrass plant in the Mediterranean basin that forms huge underwater meadows. Its leaves, when decomposed, are transported to the coasts, where they create huge banquettes that protect the beaches from sea erosion. Its roots and rhizome fragments, instead, aggregate into fibrous sea balls, called egagropili, that are shaped and accumulated by the waves along the shoreline. Their presence on the beach is generally disliked by tourists, and, thus, local communities commonly treat them as waste to remove and discard. Posidonia oceanica egagropili might represent a vegetable lignocellulose biomass to be valorized as a renewable substrate to produce added value molecules in biotechnological processes, as bio-absorbents in environmental decontamination, to prepare new bioplastics and biocomposites, or as insulating and reinforcement materials for construction and building. In this review, the structural characteristics, and the biological role of Posidonia oceanica egagropili are described, as well as their applications in different fields as reported in scientific papers published in recent years.

Keywords: Posidonia oceanica; cellulose; egagropili; holocellulose; lignin; marine waste.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Alismatales* / chemistry
  • Mediterranean Sea
  • Plant Leaves
  • Plant Roots*
  • Rhizome

Grants and funding

This review received no external funding.