Cultivation of seaweed Gracilaria in Chinese coastal waters and its contribution to environmental improvements

Abstract: 

Over the past decade, the large-scale cultivation of seaweed Gracilaria has expanded rapidly in the Chinese coastal waters. The production of Gracilaria increased from 50,536 tons (t, dry weight) in 2003 to 114,722 t in 2010. The production of the seaweed ranks third only to kelps Saccharina (formerly referred to as Laminaria) and Undaria in China. Nan'ao located in Shantou City, Guangdong Province has been successfully developed as one of the major cultivation bases of Gracilaria lemaneiformis at an industrial scale in South China since 2000, and the farmed area increased by 11,538-fold from 0.13 ha in 2000 to 1500 ha in 2011. From lab-scale study to field industrial practice, it has been documented that Gracilaria cultivation is beneficial in environmental improvements such as mitigating eutrophication, controlling harmful algal blooms, maintaining healthy mariculture systems, and sequestrating CO2. Gracilaria may significantly remediate contaminants in mariculture ecosystems and improve the water environment, and its cultivation provides a new approach to coastal environmental improvement in China and the world.

Author(s): 
Yufeng Yang
Qing Wang
Zhaoyang Chai
Weizhou Chen
Zhili He
Shijun Jiang
Keywords: 
Gracilaria cultivation
Mariculture
Bioremediation
Environmental improvement
Chinese coastal waters
Article Source: 
Algal Research
Category: 
Aquaculture methods
Geography
Uses of Seaweeds: Miscellaneous