1A je napisal/ameni se zdi da so mi bile glede prebave boljše modro zelene-klamatske alge
Razumem, da imaš tako mnenje.
Meni je tole iz nekega članka kar dalo misliti (prekopirano iz tistega linka zgoraj). Ko sem iskala malo po internetu, sem največ študij in potrditev našla za zelene alge (gojene, da se razumemo). Ampak imamo pravico, da se odločimo. Vsak po svoje. When I searched the scientific literature, most of the information regarding A. flos-aquae was not about health benefits, but health hazards.
A. flos-aquae is the green pond scum that sewage engineers constantly try to control. It kills fish, livestock, wild animals, and people's pets. The reason why more people aren't poisoned, one researcher noted, was the repelling appearance of A. flos-aquae-contaminated water. The literature is full of ways to eradicate it with chlorine, copper sulfate, and other compounds. A. flos-aquae proliferates in sewage and other waters rich in nitrogen and phosphorus. Upper Klamath Lake, where Cell Tech harvests its algae, is a shallow eutrophied lake full of nitrogen and phosphorus from animal feces. Klamath Lake lies along a migratory bird flyway, and large colonies of pelicans poop there year-round in a protected sanctuary. The August 1995 issue of Vegetarian Times describes the lake as pretty polluted. Three epidemic fish kills have occurred there recently, due to algal blooms.Toxins may also come from bacterial contaminants. Pathogenic bacteria luxuriate in water with a slightly basic pH, like water found in Klamath Lake.
Pa še najbolj me moti to, da so blazno drage (okoli 10.000 SIT - jaz še kar v tolarjih razmišljam).