Hayashi, Leila; Reis, Renata P.; dos Santos, Alex Alves; Castelar, Beatriz; Robledo, Daniel; de Vega, Gloria Batista; Msuya, Flower E.; Eswaran, K.; Yasir, Suhaimi Md.; Ali, Majid Khan Majahar; Hurtado, Anicia Q.
Description:
Kappaphycus and Eucheuma species have been successfully cultivated in Southeast Asia
since the early 1970s. The increasing global demand for carrageenan in processed foods and
thereby the need for industrial-scales of biomass to be provided to feed an extraction industry,
exceeded wild stock availability and productivity and commercial demands could only
be achieved through extensive cultivation of selected carrageenophytes. This unprecedented
situation led to the introduction of carrageenophyte species and cultivars around the world;
combined production of Eucheuma and Kappaphycus is one of the largest for seaweed biomass
in the world.
The activity of, and economic benefits accrued from, seaweed farming are indeed responsible
for significant changes in rural, coastal communities in a number of important countries.
Such activities generating new activity and income are often the only source of cash to some of the farmers. However, in spite of the enormous size and value of the industry the
techniques applied to cultivation of carrageenophytes has remained almost unchanged in
the commercial farms. Seedlings (or vegetatively propagated fragments of older, larger,
mature thalli) are still most commonly planted along ropes held in various configurations,
in most of the major production centers, e.g. mostly classified as simple stakes in the ground
(off-bottom planting to floating rafts of various design). Some technological developments
have been made in Brazil and India with the implementation of tubular nets for planting,
which allows a degree of mechanization on the farms; both countries are developing
mechanical harvesters. Further to co-production of biomass and harvesting, the drying process
is still a limiting problem for production, and drying costs are high, in countries with
high rainfall, this segment of the process is discussed in detail by Ali et al. Chap. 8). Diseases
such as “ice-ice” and blooms of epiphytes and endophytes (see Chap. 6 by Loureiro et al.),
as well as present and impending climate change effects (see Chap. 7 by Largo et al.) are
also very big challenges.
In general, the production of carrageenophytes in tropical and sub-tropical regions is
very dependent on the weather: as in prevailing conditions during the dry and wet seasons
or surface seawater temperatures (SSTs) during “cold” winters and/or “hot” summers. For
the future, efforts need to be made to increase the productivity and resistance of the selected
strains of carrageenophyte seedlings against environmental instabilities.