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Review Articles

Research progress and future study on physicochemical, nutritional, and structural characteristics of canola and rapeseed feedstocks and co-products from bio-oil processing and nutrient modeling evaluation methods

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Abstract

This article aims to review research progress and provide future study on physicochemical, nutritional, and molecular structural characteristics of canola and rapeseed feedstocks and co-products from bio-oil processing and nutrient modeling evaluation methods. The review includes Canola oil seed production, utilization and features; Rapeseed oil seed production and canola oil seed import in China; Bio-processing, co-products and conventional evaluation methods; Modeling methods for evaluation of truly absorbed protein supply from canola feedstock and co-products. The article provides our current research in feedstocks and co-products from bio-oil processing which include Characterization of chemical and nutrient profiles and ruminal degradation and intestinal digestion; Revealing intrinsic molecular structures and relationship between the molecular structure spectra features and nutrient supply from feedstocks and co-products using advanced vibrational molecular spectroscopy technique. The study focused on advanced vibrational molecular spectroscopy which can be used as a fast tool to study molecular structure features of feedstock and co-products from bio-oil processing. The article also provides future in depth study areas. This review provides an insight as how to use advanced vibrational molecular spectroscopy for in-depth analysis of the relationship between molecular structure spectral feature and nutrition delivery from canola feedstocks and co-products from bio-oil processing.

Acknowledgements

The Ministry of Agriculture Strategic Research Chair (PY) Program fund Agricultural Development Fund (ADF), Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC-Individual Discovery Grant and NSERC-CRD Grant), Saskatchewan Pulse Growers (SPG), Prairie Oat Growers Association (POGA), SaskCanola, Canola Council of Canada, Saskatchewan Agriculture Strategic Research Chair Program, SaskMilk, Saskatchewan Forage Network (SNK), Western Grain Research Foundation (WGRF) etc are acknowledged. The authors would like to thank Brittany Dyck and Qin Guoqin (Canola Council of Canada) and Xuewei Zhang (Tianjing Agricultural University) for help sampling canola seed and canola meal in various crushers in both Canada and China, Denise Beaulieu and Rex Newkirk for being in advisory committee, and Zhiyuan Niu (Department of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Saskatchewan) for technical assistance. The authors would like to acknowledge the University of Saskatchewan, the Rainer Dairy Research Facility, and Alexander Malcolm Shaw Memorial Graduate Scholarship (to AO).

Author contributions

AO wrote the review as part of her thesis, and PY, supervisor and wrote a section of the review and summarized AO’s two project studies, reviewed the manuscript, edited the article to the journal format and managed the article submission till publication.

Disclosure statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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