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  • open-water aquaculture  (1)
  • phenology  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: bioremediation ; integrated aquaculture ; nori ; phenology ; Porphyra ; salmon
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract For rapid growth and appropriate pigmentation,Porphyra requires the constant availability of nutrients, especially in summer when temperate waters are generally nutrient depleted. Cultivation near salmon cages allows the alleviation of this seasonal depletion by using the significant loading of fishf arms, which is then valued (wastes become fertilisers) and managed (competition for nutrients between desirable algal crops and problem species associated with severe disturbances). Porphyra,being an extremely efficient nutrient pump, is an excellent candidate for integrated aquaculture for bioremediation and economic diversification. Frequent harvesting provides for constant removal of significant quantities of nutrients from coastal waters, and for production of seaweeds of commercial value. The production of P. yezoensis being limited in the Gulf of Maine, an assessment of the potential of seven native north-west Atlantic Porphyra species is presently in progress. To enable the production of conchospores for net seeding, the phenology of these species and the conditions for their vegetative conchocelis exponential growth, conchosporangium induction, and conchospore maturation were determined. The development of integrated aquaculture systems is a positive initiative for optimising the efficiency of aquaculture operations, while maintaining the health of coastal waters.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Chondrus crispus ; open-water aquaculture ; cold-water aquaculture ; daily growth rate ; carrageenans ; nutrients
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The red alga Chondrus crispus (Irish moss) has been commercially harvested in Eastern Canada for almost 60 years. Its land-based tank aquaculture was initiated in the 1970s. In the 1990s, it became clear that production costs of these capital intensive systems were still too high for the carrageenan market but not for the production of edible seaweeds. Open-water aquaculture of cold-temperate species of carrageenophytes, and in particular of C. crispus, has rarely been attempted. This study re-examined the potential of the unique unattached and mostly vegetative population of C. crispus at Basin Head, in eastern Prince Edward Island (P.E.I.), and at 5 transplant sites in western P.E.I. Basin Head plants were successfully transplanted to other sites, providing similar or different environmental conditions, and yielding comparable, or even higher, productivity. During the peak growth periods (May to end of June and autumn), daily growth rates (DGRs) between 3 and 4% d−1 were recorded at Basin Head and Freeland, with some plants exceeding 6% d−1. Over the whole study period (May to October), DGRs between 2 and 4% d−1 were lower than those reported for different species of Eucheuma and Kappaphycus alvarezii; they were, however, compensated for by extremely high carrageenan yields (between 58.1 and 71.0% DW) during the summer months when nutrients (phosphorus and nitrogen) levels in seawater and algal tissue were low. The DGRs could be increased by developing culture structures retaining fragmenting, but otherwise healthy, large distal clumps, lost with the present simple tying of plants on screens. Preliminary results demonstrated that transplantation and grow-out techniques are biologically successful, and that the Basin Head population of C. crispus has significant potential for open-water aquaculture in estuaries and basins of Atlantic Canada.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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