Trying to grow like a weed : the impact of partial harvests on Alaria esculenta yield, quality, and cost

While seaweed aquaculture is generally promising from industry and ecological perspectives, most companies fail to become entirely profitable. This study aims to compare the impact of using two partial harvests to a single harvest on seaweed yield, biofouling, chemical composition, cost, and consume...

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Main Author: Koester, Jennifer Aimee, 1997-
Other Authors: Háskólinn á Akureyri
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Haf
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/42003
id ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/42003
record_format openpolar
spelling ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/42003 2023-05-15T16:11:04+02:00 Trying to grow like a weed : the impact of partial harvests on Alaria esculenta yield, quality, and cost Koester, Jennifer Aimee, 1997- Háskólinn á Akureyri 2022-05 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1946/42003 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1946/42003 Háskólasetur Vestfjarða Haf- og strandsvæðastjórnun Meistaraprófsritgerðir Þörungar Plöntuvistfræði Uppskera University Centre of the Westfjords Coastal and marine management Seaweed aquaculture Profit Harvest Thesis Master's 2022 ftskemman 2022-12-11T06:51:05Z While seaweed aquaculture is generally promising from industry and ecological perspectives, most companies fail to become entirely profitable. This study aims to compare the impact of using two partial harvests to a single harvest on seaweed yield, biofouling, chemical composition, cost, and consumer preferences for Alaria esculenta farmed in the Faroe Islands. The study also aims to help identify ideal, cost-efficient harvesting methodologies that ensure the financial and ecological success of the industry. During the study, 50-meter-long lines were either trimmed in harvest 1 (June 2021) and entirely harvested in harvest 2 (August 2021, partial harvest), entirely harvested in harvest 1 (total harvest), or left unharvested during harvest 1 and 2 (control). Yield, biofouling, chemical composition, and economic analyses were compared between each trial. Partial harvests did not significantly impact the harvest wet weight compared to a total harvest, and blade length decreased from harvest 1 (70-80 cm) to harvest 2 (46-57 cm). Biofouling cover in harvest 1 (1-4% cover) was signficantly lower than harvest 2 (7-8% cover) and showed a succession of epibionts from filamentous algae in harvest 1 to bryozoan in harvest 2. Biofouling likely reduced the growth of harvest 2 lines. Harvest 2 biomass was too fouled to be sold as human food, and harvest 1 had 3.5 times higher concentrations of bioactivity measurements (TPC) compared to harvest 2. However, all concentrations of potentially harmful elements peaked in harvest 1, potentially representing the bioabsorptive properties of A. esculenta without epibionts. Economically, average cost per kg (dry weight) seaweed was 1.4-1.7 times lower in the total harvest compared to the partial harvest. These results indicate that partially harvesting seaweed is not an effective method to increase yield and quality or reduce costs. Developing good farming methods is essential for the environmental sustainability of seaweed farming. This study also indicates that harvest timing is more ... Thesis Faroe Islands Skemman (Iceland) Faroe Islands Haf ENVELOPE(-19.699,-19.699,64.145,64.145)
institution Open Polar
collection Skemman (Iceland)
op_collection_id ftskemman
language English
topic Háskólasetur Vestfjarða
Haf- og strandsvæðastjórnun
Meistaraprófsritgerðir
Þörungar
Plöntuvistfræði
Uppskera
University Centre of the Westfjords
Coastal and marine management
Seaweed aquaculture
Profit
Harvest
spellingShingle Háskólasetur Vestfjarða
Haf- og strandsvæðastjórnun
Meistaraprófsritgerðir
Þörungar
Plöntuvistfræði
Uppskera
University Centre of the Westfjords
Coastal and marine management
Seaweed aquaculture
Profit
Harvest
Koester, Jennifer Aimee, 1997-
Trying to grow like a weed : the impact of partial harvests on Alaria esculenta yield, quality, and cost
topic_facet Háskólasetur Vestfjarða
Haf- og strandsvæðastjórnun
Meistaraprófsritgerðir
Þörungar
Plöntuvistfræði
Uppskera
University Centre of the Westfjords
Coastal and marine management
Seaweed aquaculture
Profit
Harvest
description While seaweed aquaculture is generally promising from industry and ecological perspectives, most companies fail to become entirely profitable. This study aims to compare the impact of using two partial harvests to a single harvest on seaweed yield, biofouling, chemical composition, cost, and consumer preferences for Alaria esculenta farmed in the Faroe Islands. The study also aims to help identify ideal, cost-efficient harvesting methodologies that ensure the financial and ecological success of the industry. During the study, 50-meter-long lines were either trimmed in harvest 1 (June 2021) and entirely harvested in harvest 2 (August 2021, partial harvest), entirely harvested in harvest 1 (total harvest), or left unharvested during harvest 1 and 2 (control). Yield, biofouling, chemical composition, and economic analyses were compared between each trial. Partial harvests did not significantly impact the harvest wet weight compared to a total harvest, and blade length decreased from harvest 1 (70-80 cm) to harvest 2 (46-57 cm). Biofouling cover in harvest 1 (1-4% cover) was signficantly lower than harvest 2 (7-8% cover) and showed a succession of epibionts from filamentous algae in harvest 1 to bryozoan in harvest 2. Biofouling likely reduced the growth of harvest 2 lines. Harvest 2 biomass was too fouled to be sold as human food, and harvest 1 had 3.5 times higher concentrations of bioactivity measurements (TPC) compared to harvest 2. However, all concentrations of potentially harmful elements peaked in harvest 1, potentially representing the bioabsorptive properties of A. esculenta without epibionts. Economically, average cost per kg (dry weight) seaweed was 1.4-1.7 times lower in the total harvest compared to the partial harvest. These results indicate that partially harvesting seaweed is not an effective method to increase yield and quality or reduce costs. Developing good farming methods is essential for the environmental sustainability of seaweed farming. This study also indicates that harvest timing is more ...
author2 Háskólinn á Akureyri
format Thesis
author Koester, Jennifer Aimee, 1997-
author_facet Koester, Jennifer Aimee, 1997-
author_sort Koester, Jennifer Aimee, 1997-
title Trying to grow like a weed : the impact of partial harvests on Alaria esculenta yield, quality, and cost
title_short Trying to grow like a weed : the impact of partial harvests on Alaria esculenta yield, quality, and cost
title_full Trying to grow like a weed : the impact of partial harvests on Alaria esculenta yield, quality, and cost
title_fullStr Trying to grow like a weed : the impact of partial harvests on Alaria esculenta yield, quality, and cost
title_full_unstemmed Trying to grow like a weed : the impact of partial harvests on Alaria esculenta yield, quality, and cost
title_sort trying to grow like a weed : the impact of partial harvests on alaria esculenta yield, quality, and cost
publishDate 2022
url http://hdl.handle.net/1946/42003
long_lat ENVELOPE(-19.699,-19.699,64.145,64.145)
geographic Faroe Islands
Haf
geographic_facet Faroe Islands
Haf
genre Faroe Islands
genre_facet Faroe Islands
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1946/42003
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