News
An Israeli firm has created the first ever 3D bio-printed grouper — which is ready to cook upon “printing.” Steakholder Foods has created a non-traditional fish for eating, and it will not ...
Forget your hook, line and sinker. An Israeli foodtech company says it has 3D printed the first ever ready-to-cook fish fillet using animal cells cultivated and grown in a laboratory.
The company says the fish is the first of its kind in the world, and they’re aiming to commercialize the 3D bioprinter used to create it. Steakholder Foods didn’t produce the fish cells it used to ...
As it happens, exposure to both types of 3D printed parts adversely affected the developing fish. However, parts made with stereolithography proved to be far more toxic than those printed with the ...
Many fish leverage these patterns to monitor their interactions with fish of their own species or different species, including mimicry, identification, camouflage, and courtship.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results