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Seaweed

Seaweed, or macroalgae, refers to thousands of species of macroscopic, multicellular, marine algae. The term includes some types of Rhodophyta (red), Phaeophyta (brown) and Chlorophyta (green) macroalgae. Seaweed species such as kelps provide essential nursery habitat for fisheries and other marine species and thus protect food sources; other species, such as planktonic algae, play a vital role in capturing carbon, producing at least 50% of Earth's oxygen.[3]

Seaweed
Informal group of macroscopic marine algae
Fucus serratus
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Seaweeds can be found in the following groups
Ascophyllum nodosum exposed to the sun in Nova Scotia, Canada
Dead man's fingers (Codium fragile) off the Massachusetts coast in the United States
The top of a kelp forest in Otago, New Zealand

Natural seaweed ecosystems are sometimes under threat from human activity. For example, mechanical dredging of kelp destroys the resource and dependent fisheries. Other forces also threaten some seaweed ecosystems; a wasting disease in predators of purple urchins has led to a urchin population surge which destroyed large kelp forest regions off the coast of California.[4]

Humans have a long history of cultivating seaweeds for their uses. In recent years, seaweed farming has become a global agricultural practice, providing food, source material for various chemical uses (such as carrageenan), cattle feeds and fertilizers. Because of their importance in marine ecologies and for absorbing carbon dioxide, recent attention has been on cultivating seaweeds as a potential climate change mitigation strategy for biosequestration of carbon dioxide, alongside other benefits like nutrient pollution reduction, increased habitat for coastal aquatic species, and reducing local ocean acidification.[5] The IPCC Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate recommends "further research attention" as a mitigation tactic.[6]

Taxonomy

"Seaweed" lacks a formal definition, but seaweed generally lives in the ocean and is visible to the naked eye. The term refers to both flowering plants submerged in the ocean, like eelgrass, as well as larger marine algae. Generally it is one of several groups of multicellular algae: red, green and brown. They lack one common multicellular ancestor, forming a polyphyletic group. In addition, bluegreen algae (Cyanobacteria) are occasionally considered in seaweed literature.[7]

The number of seaweed species is still discussed among scientists, but most likely there are several thousand species of seaweed.[8]

Genera

 
Claudea elegans tetrasporangia

The following table lists a very few example genera of seaweed.

Genus Algae
Phylum
Remarks
Caulerpa   Green Submerged
Fucus   Brown In intertidal zones on rocky shores
Gracilaria   Red Cultivated for food
Laminaria   Brown Also known as kelp
8–30 m under water
cultivated for food
Macrocystis   Brown Giant kelp
forming floating canopies
Monostroma   Green
Porphyra   Red Intertidal zones in temperate climate
Cultivated for food
Sargassum   Brown Pelagic especially in the Sargasso Sea

Anatomy

Seaweed's appearance resembles non-woody terrestrial plants. Its anatomy includes:[9][10]

  • Thallus: algal body
    • Lamina or blade: flattened structure that is somewhat leaf-like
      • Sorus: spore cluster
      • pneumatocyst, air bladder: a flotation-assisting organ on the blade
      • Kelp, float: a flotation-assisting organ between the lamina and stipe
    • Stipe: stem-like structure, may be absent
    • Holdfast: basal structure providing attachment to a substrate
      • Haptera: finger-like extension of the holdfast that anchors to a benthic substrate

The stipe and blade are collectively known as the frond.

Ecology

 
Seaweed covers this rocky seabed on the east coast of Australia

Two environmental requirements dominate seaweed ecology. These are seawater (or at least brackish water) and light sufficient to support photosynthesis. Another common requirement is an attachment point, and therefore seaweed most commonly inhabits the littoral zone (nearshore waters) and within that zone, on rocky shores more than on sand or shingle. In addition, there are few genera (e.g., Sargassum and Gracilaria) which do not live attached to the sea floor, but float freely.

Seaweed occupies various ecological niches. At the surface, they are only wetted by the tops of sea spray, while some species may attach to a substrate several meters deep. In some areas, littoral seaweed colonies can extend miles out to sea.[citation needed] The deepest living seaweed are some species of red algae. Others have adapted to live in tidal rock pools. In this habitat, seaweed must withstand rapidly changing temperature and salinity and occasional drying.[11]

Macroalgae and macroalgal detritus have also been shown to be an important food source for benthic organisms, because macroalgae shed old fronds.[12] These macroalgal fronds tend to be utilized by benthos in the intertidal zone close to the shore.[13][14] Alternatively, pneumatocysts (gas filled “bubbles”) can keep the macroalgae thallus afloat fronds are transported by wind and currents from the coast into the deep ocean.[12] It has been shown that benthic organisms also at several 100 m tend to utilize these macroalgae remnants.[14]

As macroalgae takes up carbon dioxide and release oxygen in the photosynthesis, macroalgae fronds can also contribute to carbon sequestration in the ocean, when the macroalgal fronds drift offshore into the deep ocean basins and sink to the sea floor without being remineralized by organisms.[12] The importance of this process for the Blue Carbon storage is currently discussed among scientists.[15][16][17]

Biogeographic Expansion

Nowadays a number of vectors - e.g., transport on ship hulls, exchanges among shellfish farmers, global warming, opening of trans-oceanic canals - all combine to enhance the transfer of exotic seaweeds to new environments. Since the piercing of the Suez Canal,the situation is particularly acute in the Mediterranean Sea, a 'marine biodiversity hotspot' that now registers over 120 newly introduced seaweed species -the largest number in the world.[18]

Production

As of 2018, the top 10 countries produced 96% of the global total of 2,165,675 metric tons.[19]

Seaweed production
Country metric tons
per year ('000),
cultured+wild
China 699
France 617
United Kingdom 205
Japan 123
Chile 109
Philippines 96
North Korea 71
South Korea 67
Indonesia 47
Norway 41

Farming

Seaweed farming or kelp farming is the practice of cultivating and harvesting seaweed. In its simplest form, it consists of the management of naturally found batches. In its most advanced form, it consists of fully controlling the life cycle of the algae. The top seven most cultivated seaweed taxa are Eucheuma spp., Kappaphycus alvarezii, Gracilaria spp., Saccharina japonica, Undaria pinnatifida, Pyropia spp., and Sargassum fusiforme. Eucheuma and K. alvarezii are farmed for carrageenan (a gelling agent); Gracilaria is farmed for agar; while the rest are farmed for food.[20] The largest seaweed-producing countries are China, Indonesia, and the Philippines. Other notable producers include South Korea, North Korea, Japan, Malaysia, and Zanzibar (Tanzania).[21] Seaweed farming has frequently been developed as an alternative to improve economic conditions and to reduce fishing pressure and overexploited fisheries.[22]

Global production of farmed aquatic plants, overwhelmingly dominated by seaweeds, grew in output volume from 13.5×10^6 t (13,300,000 long tons; 14,900,000 short tons) in 1995 to just over 30×10^6 t (30,000,000 long tons; 33,000,000 short tons) in 2016.[23] As of 2014, seaweed was 27% of all marine aquaculture.[24]

Seaweed farming is a carbon negative crop, with a high potential for climate change mitigation.[25][24] The IPCC Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate recommends "further research attention" as a mitigation tactic.[26]

Uses

Seaweed has a variety of uses, for which it is farmed[27] or foraged.[28]

Food

Seaweed is consumed across the world, particularly in East Asia, e.g. Japan, China, Korea, Taiwan and Southeast Asia, e.g. Brunei, Singapore, Thailand, Burma, Cambodia, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Malaysia,[29] as well as in South Africa, Belize, Peru, Chile, the Canadian Maritimes, Scandinavia, South West England,[30] Ireland, Wales, Hawaii and California, and Scotland.

Gim (김, Korea), nori (海苔, Japan) and zicai (紫菜, China) are sheets of dried Porphyra used in soups, sushi or onigiri (rice balls). Chondrus crispus ('Irish moss' or carrageenan moss) is used in food additives, along with Kappaphycus and Gigartinoid seaweed. Porphyra is used in Wales to make laverbread (sometimes with oat flour). In northern Belize, seaweed is mixed with milk, nutmeg, cinnamon and vanilla to make "dulce" ("sweet").

Alginate, agar and carrageenan are gelatinous seaweed products collectively known as hydrocolloids or phycocolloids. Hydrocolloids are food additives.[31] The food industry exploits their gelling, water-retention, emulsifying and other physical properties. Agar is used in foods such as confectionery, meat and poultry products, desserts and beverages and moulded foods. Carrageenan is used in salad dressings and sauces, dietetic foods, and as a preservative in meat and fish, dairy items and baked goods.

Medicine and herbs

 
Seaweed-covered rocks in the United Kingdom
 
Seaweed on rocks on Long Island

Alginates are used in wound dressings (see alginate dressing), and dental moulds. In microbiology, agar is used as a culture medium. Carrageenans, alginates and agaroses, with other macroalgal polysaccharides, have biomedicine applications. Delisea pulchra may interfere with bacterial colonization.[32] Sulfated saccharides from red and green algae inhibit some DNA and RNA-enveloped viruses.[33]

Seaweed extract is used in some diet pills.[34] Other seaweed pills exploit the same effect as gastric banding, expanding in the stomach to make the stomach feel more full.[35][36]

Climate change mitigation

There has been considerable attention to how large-scale seaweed cultivation in the open ocean can act as a form of carbon sequestration to mitigate climate change.[37][38] A number of academic studies have demonstrated that nearshore seaweed forests constitute a source of blue carbon, as seaweed detritus is carried by wave currents into the middle and deep ocean thereby sequestering carbon.[26][24][39][40][41] Moreover, nothing on earth sequesters carbon faster than Macrocystis pyrifera (also known as giant kelp) which can grow up to 60 m in length and as rapidly as 50 cm a day in ideal conditions.[42] It has therefore been suggested that growing seaweeds at scale can have a significant impact on climate change. According to one study, covering 9% of the world’s oceans with kelp forests “could produce sufficient biomethane to replace all of today’s needs in fossil fuel energy, while removing 53 billion tons of CO2 per year from the atmosphere, restoring pre-industrial levels”.[43]

Other uses

Other seaweed may be used as fertilizer, compost for landscaping, or to combat beach erosion through burial in beach dunes.[44]

Seaweed is under consideration as a potential source of bioethanol.[45][46]

 
Seaweed is lifted out of the top of algae scrubber/cultivator, to be discarded or used as food, fertilizer, or skin care

Alginates are used in industrial products such as paper coatings, adhesives, dyes, gels, explosives and in processes such as paper sizing, textile printing, hydro-mulching and drilling. Seaweed is an ingredient in toothpaste, cosmetics and paints. Seaweed is used for the production of bio yarn (a textile).[47]

Several of these resources can be obtained from seaweed through biorefining.

Seaweed collecting is the process of collecting, drying and pressing seaweed. It was a popular pastime in the Victorian era and remains a hobby today. In some emerging countries, Seaweed is harvested daily to support communities.

 
Women in Tanzania grow "Mwani" (seaweed in Swahili). The farms are made up of little sticks in neat rows in the warm, shallow water. Once they harvest the seaweed, it is used for many purposes: food, cosmetics, fabric, etc.

Seaweed is sometimes used to build roofs on houses on Læsø in Denmark[48]

Seaweeds are used as animal feeds. They have long been grazed by sheep, horses and cattle in Northern Europe. They are valued for fish production.[49] Adding seaweed to livestock feed can substantially reduce methane emissions from cattle.[50]

Health risks

Rotting seaweed is a potent source of hydrogen sulfide, a highly toxic gas, and has been implicated in some incidents of apparent hydrogen-sulphide poisoning.[51] It can cause vomiting and diarrhea.

The so-called "stinging seaweed" Microcoleus lyngbyaceus is a filamentous cyanobacteria which contains toxins including lyngbyatoxin-a and debromoaplysiatoxin. Direct skin contact can cause seaweed dermatitis characterized by painful, burning lesions that last for days.[1][52]

Threats

Bacterial disease ice-ice infects Kappaphycus (red seaweed), turning its branches white. The disease caused heavy crop losses in the Philippines, Tanzania and Mozambique.[53]

Sea urchin barrens have replaced kelp forests in multiple areas. They are “almost immune to starvation”. Lifespans can exceed 50 years. When stressed by hunger, their jaws and teeth enlarge, and they form "fronts" and hunt for food collectively.[53]

See also

References

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Further reading

External links

  • Michael Guiry's Seaweed Site information on all aspects of algae, seaweed and marine algal biology
  • , information on seaweed utilisation for the African continent.
  • Seaweed. A chemical industry in Brittany, in the past and today.
  • AlgaeBase, a searchable taxonomic, image, and utilization database of freshwater, marine and terrestrial algae, including seaweed.

seaweed, this, article, about, aquatic, plant, like, algae, culinary, uses, edible, seaweed, similarly, named, plant, seagrass, other, uses, disambiguation, macroalgae, refers, thousands, species, macroscopic, multicellular, marine, algae, term, includes, some. This article is about the aquatic plant like algae For its culinary uses see Edible seaweed For the similarly named plant see Seagrass For other uses see Seaweed disambiguation Seaweed or macroalgae refers to thousands of species of macroscopic multicellular marine algae The term includes some types of Rhodophyta red Phaeophyta brown and Chlorophyta green macroalgae Seaweed species such as kelps provide essential nursery habitat for fisheries and other marine species and thus protect food sources other species such as planktonic algae play a vital role in capturing carbon producing at least 50 of Earth s oxygen 3 SeaweedInformal group of macroscopic marine algaeFucus serratusScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaSeaweeds can be found in the following groupsChlorophyta green algae Phaeophyceae brown algae Phaeothamniophyceae Chrysophyceae gold algae Cyanobacteria 1 2 Rhodophyta red algae Ascophyllum nodosum exposed to the sun in Nova Scotia Canada Dead man s fingers Codium fragile off the Massachusetts coast in the United States The top of a kelp forest in Otago New Zealand Natural seaweed ecosystems are sometimes under threat from human activity For example mechanical dredging of kelp destroys the resource and dependent fisheries Other forces also threaten some seaweed ecosystems a wasting disease in predators of purple urchins has led to a urchin population surge which destroyed large kelp forest regions off the coast of California 4 Humans have a long history of cultivating seaweeds for their uses In recent years seaweed farming has become a global agricultural practice providing food source material for various chemical uses such as carrageenan cattle feeds and fertilizers Because of their importance in marine ecologies and for absorbing carbon dioxide recent attention has been on cultivating seaweeds as a potential climate change mitigation strategy for biosequestration of carbon dioxide alongside other benefits like nutrient pollution reduction increased habitat for coastal aquatic species and reducing local ocean acidification 5 The IPCC Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate recommends further research attention as a mitigation tactic 6 Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Genera 2 Anatomy 3 Ecology 3 1 Biogeographic Expansion 4 Production 4 1 Farming 5 Uses 5 1 Food 5 2 Medicine and herbs 5 3 Climate change mitigation 5 4 Other uses 6 Health risks 7 Threats 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksTaxonomy Edit Seaweed lacks a formal definition but seaweed generally lives in the ocean and is visible to the naked eye The term refers to both flowering plants submerged in the ocean like eelgrass as well as larger marine algae Generally it is one of several groups of multicellular algae red green and brown They lack one common multicellular ancestor forming a polyphyletic group In addition bluegreen algae Cyanobacteria are occasionally considered in seaweed literature 7 The number of seaweed species is still discussed among scientists but most likely there are several thousand species of seaweed 8 Genera Edit Claudea elegans tetrasporangia The following table lists a very few example genera of seaweed Genus AlgaePhylum RemarksCaulerpa Green SubmergedFucus Brown In intertidal zones on rocky shoresGracilaria Red Cultivated for foodLaminaria Brown Also known as kelp8 30 m under watercultivated for foodMacrocystis Brown Giant kelpforming floating canopiesMonostroma GreenPorphyra Red Intertidal zones in temperate climateCultivated for foodSargassum Brown Pelagic especially in the Sargasso SeaAnatomy EditSeaweed s appearance resembles non woody terrestrial plants Its anatomy includes 9 10 Thallus algal body Lamina or blade flattened structure that is somewhat leaf like Sorus spore cluster pneumatocyst air bladder a flotation assisting organ on the blade Kelp float a flotation assisting organ between the lamina and stipe Stipe stem like structure may be absent Holdfast basal structure providing attachment to a substrate Haptera finger like extension of the holdfast that anchors to a benthic substrateThe stipe and blade are collectively known as the frond Ecology Edit Seaweed covers this rocky seabed on the east coast of Australia Two environmental requirements dominate seaweed ecology These are seawater or at least brackish water and light sufficient to support photosynthesis Another common requirement is an attachment point and therefore seaweed most commonly inhabits the littoral zone nearshore waters and within that zone on rocky shores more than on sand or shingle In addition there are few genera e g Sargassum and Gracilaria which do not live attached to the sea floor but float freely Seaweed occupies various ecological niches At the surface they are only wetted by the tops of sea spray while some species may attach to a substrate several meters deep In some areas littoral seaweed colonies can extend miles out to sea citation needed The deepest living seaweed are some species of red algae Others have adapted to live in tidal rock pools In this habitat seaweed must withstand rapidly changing temperature and salinity and occasional drying 11 Macroalgae and macroalgal detritus have also been shown to be an important food source for benthic organisms because macroalgae shed old fronds 12 These macroalgal fronds tend to be utilized by benthos in the intertidal zone close to the shore 13 14 Alternatively pneumatocysts gas filled bubbles can keep the macroalgae thallus afloat fronds are transported by wind and currents from the coast into the deep ocean 12 It has been shown that benthic organisms also at several 100 m tend to utilize these macroalgae remnants 14 As macroalgae takes up carbon dioxide and release oxygen in the photosynthesis macroalgae fronds can also contribute to carbon sequestration in the ocean when the macroalgal fronds drift offshore into the deep ocean basins and sink to the sea floor without being remineralized by organisms 12 The importance of this process for the Blue Carbon storage is currently discussed among scientists 15 16 17 Biogeographic Expansion Edit Nowadays a number of vectors e g transport on ship hulls exchanges among shellfish farmers global warming opening of trans oceanic canals all combine to enhance the transfer of exotic seaweeds to new environments Since the piercing of the Suez Canal the situation is particularly acute in the Mediterranean Sea a marine biodiversity hotspot that now registers over 120 newly introduced seaweed species the largest number in the world 18 Production EditAs of 2018 the top 10 countries produced 96 of the global total of 2 165 675 metric tons 19 Seaweed production Country metric tons per year 000 cultured wildChina 699France 617United Kingdom 205Japan 123Chile 109Philippines 96North Korea 71South Korea 67Indonesia 47Norway 41Farming Edit This section is an excerpt from Seaweed farming edit Seaweed farming or kelp farming is the practice of cultivating and harvesting seaweed In its simplest form it consists of the management of naturally found batches In its most advanced form it consists of fully controlling the life cycle of the algae The top seven most cultivated seaweed taxa are Eucheuma spp Kappaphycus alvarezii Gracilaria spp Saccharina japonica Undaria pinnatifida Pyropia spp and Sargassum fusiforme Eucheuma and K alvarezii are farmed for carrageenan a gelling agent Gracilaria is farmed for agar while the rest are farmed for food 20 The largest seaweed producing countries are China Indonesia and the Philippines Other notable producers include South Korea North Korea Japan Malaysia and Zanzibar Tanzania 21 Seaweed farming has frequently been developed as an alternative to improve economic conditions and to reduce fishing pressure and overexploited fisheries 22 Global production of farmed aquatic plants overwhelmingly dominated by seaweeds grew in output volume from 13 5 10 6 t 13 300 000 long tons 14 900 000 short tons in 1995 to just over 30 10 6 t 30 000 000 long tons 33 000 000 short tons in 2016 23 As of 2014 seaweed was 27 of all marine aquaculture 24 Seaweed farming is a carbon negative crop with a high potential for climate change mitigation 25 24 The IPCC Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate recommends further research attention as a mitigation tactic 26 Uses EditFurther information Seaweed farming Uses Seaweed has a variety of uses for which it is farmed 27 or foraged 28 Food Edit Main article Edible seaweed Seaweed is consumed across the world particularly in East Asia e g Japan China Korea Taiwan and Southeast Asia e g Brunei Singapore Thailand Burma Cambodia Vietnam Indonesia the Philippines and Malaysia 29 as well as in South Africa Belize Peru Chile the Canadian Maritimes Scandinavia South West England 30 Ireland Wales Hawaii and California and Scotland Gim 김 Korea nori 海苔 Japan and zicai 紫菜 China are sheets of dried Porphyra used in soups sushi or onigiri rice balls Chondrus crispus Irish moss or carrageenan moss is used in food additives along with Kappaphycus and Gigartinoid seaweed Porphyra is used in Wales to make laverbread sometimes with oat flour In northern Belize seaweed is mixed with milk nutmeg cinnamon and vanilla to make dulce sweet Alginate agar and carrageenan are gelatinous seaweed products collectively known as hydrocolloids or phycocolloids Hydrocolloids are food additives 31 The food industry exploits their gelling water retention emulsifying and other physical properties Agar is used in foods such as confectionery meat and poultry products desserts and beverages and moulded foods Carrageenan is used in salad dressings and sauces dietetic foods and as a preservative in meat and fish dairy items and baked goods Medicine and herbs Edit See also Fucoidan Seaweed covered rocks in the United Kingdom Seaweed on rocks on Long Island Alginates are used in wound dressings see alginate dressing and dental moulds In microbiology agar is used as a culture medium Carrageenans alginates and agaroses with other macroalgal polysaccharides have biomedicine applications Delisea pulchra may interfere with bacterial colonization 32 Sulfated saccharides from red and green algae inhibit some DNA and RNA enveloped viruses 33 Seaweed extract is used in some diet pills 34 Other seaweed pills exploit the same effect as gastric banding expanding in the stomach to make the stomach feel more full 35 36 Climate change mitigation Edit Further information Carbon sequestration and blue carbon This section is an excerpt from Seaweed farming Climate change mitigation edit There has been considerable attention to how large scale seaweed cultivation in the open ocean can act as a form of carbon sequestration to mitigate climate change 37 38 A number of academic studies have demonstrated that nearshore seaweed forests constitute a source of blue carbon as seaweed detritus is carried by wave currents into the middle and deep ocean thereby sequestering carbon 26 24 39 40 41 Moreover nothing on earth sequesters carbon faster than Macrocystis pyrifera also known as giant kelp which can grow up to 60 m in length and as rapidly as 50 cm a day in ideal conditions 42 It has therefore been suggested that growing seaweeds at scale can have a significant impact on climate change According to one study covering 9 of the world s oceans with kelp forests could produce sufficient biomethane to replace all of today s needs in fossil fuel energy while removing 53 billion tons of CO2 per year from the atmosphere restoring pre industrial levels 43 Other uses Edit See also Seaweed fertilizer and Seaweed fuel Other seaweed may be used as fertilizer compost for landscaping or to combat beach erosion through burial in beach dunes 44 Seaweed is under consideration as a potential source of bioethanol 45 46 Seaweed is lifted out of the top of algae scrubber cultivator to be discarded or used as food fertilizer or skin care Alginates are used in industrial products such as paper coatings adhesives dyes gels explosives and in processes such as paper sizing textile printing hydro mulching and drilling Seaweed is an ingredient in toothpaste cosmetics and paints Seaweed is used for the production of bio yarn a textile 47 Several of these resources can be obtained from seaweed through biorefining Seaweed collecting is the process of collecting drying and pressing seaweed It was a popular pastime in the Victorian era and remains a hobby today In some emerging countries Seaweed is harvested daily to support communities Women in Tanzania grow Mwani seaweed in Swahili The farms are made up of little sticks in neat rows in the warm shallow water Once they harvest the seaweed it is used for many purposes food cosmetics fabric etc Seaweed is sometimes used to build roofs on houses on Laeso in Denmark 48 Seaweeds are used as animal feeds They have long been grazed by sheep horses and cattle in Northern Europe They are valued for fish production 49 Adding seaweed to livestock feed can substantially reduce methane emissions from cattle 50 Onigiri and wakame miso soup Japan Laverbread and toast Small plots being used to farm seaweed in Indonesia with each rectangle belonging to a different familyHealth risks EditRotting seaweed is a potent source of hydrogen sulfide a highly toxic gas and has been implicated in some incidents of apparent hydrogen sulphide poisoning 51 It can cause vomiting and diarrhea The so called stinging seaweed Microcoleus lyngbyaceus is a filamentous cyanobacteria which contains toxins including lyngbyatoxin a and debromoaplysiatoxin Direct skin contact can cause seaweed dermatitis characterized by painful burning lesions that last for days 1 52 Threats EditBacterial disease ice ice infects Kappaphycus red seaweed turning its branches white The disease caused heavy crop losses in the Philippines Tanzania and Mozambique 53 Sea urchin barrens have replaced kelp forests in multiple areas They are almost immune to starvation Lifespans can exceed 50 years When stressed by hunger their jaws and teeth enlarge and they form fronts and hunt for food collectively 53 See also EditAlgaculture Aquaculture involving the farming of algae Seaweed fertilizer Algae fuel Use of algae as a source of energy rich oils Edible seaweed Algae that can be eaten and used for culinary purposes Aonori Type of edible green seaweed Cochayuyo Species of seaweed a form of kelp used as a vegetable in Chile Hijiki Species of seaweed Kombu Edible kelp Limu Mozuku Species of seaweed Nori Edible seaweed species of the red algae genus Pyropia Ogonori Genus of seaweeds Wakame Species of seaweed Marine permaculture Sea lettuce Genus of seaweeds Seaweed cultivator Seaweed dermatitis Species of bacterium Seaweed toxinsReferences Edit a b https www cabdirect org cabdirect abstract 19822902103 Escharotic stomatitis caused by the stinging seaweed Microcoleus lyngbyaceus formerly Lyngbya majuscula case report and literature review James William D Berger Timothy G et al 2006 Andrews Diseases of the Skin clinical Dermatology Saunders Elsevier ISBN 978 0 7216 2921 6 How much oxygen comes from the ocean National Ocean Service National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved 23 November 2021 California s crashing kelp forest phys org Retrieved 2021 02 24 Duarte Carlos M Wu Jiaping Xiao Xi Bruhn Annette Krause Jensen Dorte 2017 Can Seaweed Farming Play a Role in Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation Frontiers in Marine Science 4 doi 10 3389 fmars 2017 00100 ISSN 2296 7745 Bindoff N L Cheung W W L Kairo J G Aristegui J et al 2019 Chapter 5 Changing Ocean Marine Ecosystems and Dependent Communities PDF IPCC Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate pp 447 587 Lobban Christopher S Harrison Paul J 1994 Morphology life histories and morphogenesis Seaweed Ecology and Physiology 1 68 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511626210 002 ISBN 9780521408974 Townsend David W March 2012 Oceanography and Marine Biology An Introduction to Marine Science Oxford University Press Inc ISBN 9780878936021 seaweed menu www easterncapescubadiving co za Retrieved 2019 04 28 The Science of Seaweeds American Scientist 2017 02 06 Retrieved 2022 06 02 Lewis J R 1964 The Ecology of Rocky Shores The English Universities Press Ltd a b c Krause Jensen Dorte Duarte Carlos 2016 Substantial role of macroalgae in marine carbon sequestration Nature Geoscience 9 10 737 742 Bibcode 2016NatGe 9 737K doi 10 1038 ngeo2790 Dunton K H Schell D M 1987 Dependence of consumers on macroalgal Laminaria solidungula carbon in an arctic kelp community d13C evidence Marine Biology 93 4 615 625 doi 10 1007 BF00392799 S2CID 84714929 a b Renaud Paul E Lokken Therese S Jorgensen Lis L Berge Jorgen Johnson Beverly J June 2015 Macroalgal detritus and food web subsidies along an Arctic fjord depth gradient Front Mar Sci 2 doi 10 3389 fmars 2015 00031 S2CID 10417856 Watanabe Kenta Yoshida Goro Hori Masakazu Umezawa Yu Moki Hirotada Kuwae Tomohiro May 2020 Macroalgal metabolism and lateral carbon flows can create significant carbon sinks Biogeosciences 17 9 2425 2440 Bibcode 2020BGeo 17 2425W doi 10 5194 bg 17 2425 2020 Retrieved September 21 2020 Krause Jensen Dorte Lavery Paul Serrano Oscar Marba Nuria Masque Pere Duarte Carlos M June 2018 Sequestration of macroalgal carbon the elephant in the Blue Carbon room The Royal Society Publishing 14 6 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2018 0236 PMC 6030603 PMID 29925564 Ortega Alejandra Geraldi Nathan R Alam Intikhab Kamau Allan A Acinas Silvia G Logares Ramiro Gasol Josep M Massana Ramon Krause Jensen Dorte Duarte Carlos M 2019 Important contribution of macroalgae to oceanic carbon sequestration Nature Geoscience 12 9 748 754 Bibcode 2019NatGe 12 748O doi 10 1038 s41561 019 0421 8 hdl 10754 656768 S2CID 199448971 Briand Frederic ed 2015 CIESM Atlas of Exotic Species in the Mediterranean Volume 4 Macrophytes CIESM Paris Monaco p 364 ISBN 9789299000342 Volume of seaweed production ranked by country surialink seaplant net Archived from the original on 2020 08 13 Retrieved 2019 04 28 Reynolds Daman Caminiti Jeff Edmundson Scott Gao Song Wick Macdonald Huesemann Michael 2022 07 12 Seaweed proteins are nutritionally valuable components in the human diet The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 116 4 855 861 doi 10 1093 ajcn nqac190 ISSN 0002 9165 PMID 35820048 Buschmann Alejandro H Camus Carolina Infante Javier Neori Amir Israel Alvaro Hernandez Gonzalez Maria C Pereda Sandra V Gomez Pinchetti Juan Luis Golberg Alexander Tadmor Shalev Niva Critchley Alan T 2 October 2017 Seaweed production overview of the global state of exploitation farming and emerging research activity European Journal of Phycology 52 4 391 406 doi 10 1080 09670262 2017 1365175 ISSN 0967 0262 S2CID 53640917 Ask E I 1990 Cottonii and Spinosum Cultivation Handbook Philippines FMC BioPolymer Corporation p 52 In brief The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2018 PDF Food and Agriculture Organization 2018 a b c Duarte Carlos M Wu Jiaping Xiao Xi Bruhn Annette Krause Jensen Dorte 2017 Can Seaweed Farming Play a Role in Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation Frontiers in Marine Science 4 doi 10 3389 fmars 2017 00100 ISSN 2296 7745 Wang Taiping Yang Zhaoqing Davis Jonathan Edmundson Scott J 2022 05 01 Quantifying Nitrogen Bioextraction by Seaweed Farms A Real time Modeling Monitoring Case Study in Hood Canal WA Technical report Office of Scientific and Technical Information doi 10 2172 1874372 a b Bindoff N L Cheung W W L Kairo J G Aristegui J et al 2019 Chapter 5 Changing Ocean Marine Ecosystems and Dependent Communities PDF IPCC Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate pp 447 587 Seaweed farmers get better prices if united Sun Star 2008 06 19 Archived from the original on 2008 09 09 Retrieved 2008 07 16 Springtime s foraging treats The Guardian London 2007 01 06 Retrieved 2008 07 16 Mohammad Salma 4 Jan 2020 Application of seaweed Kappaphycus alvarezii in Malaysian food products International Food Research Journal 26 1677 1687 Devon Family Friendly Tasty Seaweed Recipe Honest BBC 2005 05 25 Retrieved 2012 06 28 Round F E 1962 The Biology of the Algae Edward Arnold Ltd Francesca Cappitelli Claudia Sorlini 2008 Microorganisms attack synthetic polymers in items representing our cultural heritage Applied and Environmental Microbiology 74 3 564 569 Bibcode 2008ApEnM 74 564C doi 10 1128 AEM 01768 07 PMC 2227722 PMID 18065627 Kazlowski B Chiu Y H Kazlowska K Pan C L Wu C J August 2012 Prevention of Japanese encephalitis virus infections by low degree polymerisation sulfated saccharides from Gracilaria sp and Monostroma nitidum Food Chem 133 3 866 74 doi 10 1016 j foodchem 2012 01 106 Maeda Hayato Hosokawa Masashi Sashima Tokutake Funayama Katsura Miyashita Kazuo 2005 07 01 Fucoxanthin from edible seaweed Undaria pinnatifida shows antiobesity effect through UCP1 expression in white adipose tissues Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 332 2 392 397 doi 10 1016 j bbrc 2005 05 002 ISSN 0006 291X PMID 15896707 New Seaweed Pill Works Like Gastric Banding Fox News 25 March 2015 Elena Gorgan 6 January 2009 Appesat the Seaweed Diet Pill that Expands in the Stomach softpedia Duarte Carlos M Wu Jiaping Xiao Xi Bruhn Annette Krause Jensen Dorte 2017 Can Seaweed Farming Play a Role in Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation Frontiers in Marine Science 4 100 doi 10 3389 fmars 2017 00100 ISSN 2296 7745 Temple James 2021 09 19 Companies hoping to grow carbon sucking kelp may be rushing ahead of the science MIT Technology Review Retrieved 2021 11 25 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Queiros Ana Moura Stephens Nicholas Widdicombe Stephen Tait Karen McCoy Sophie J Ingels Jeroen Ruhl Saskia Airs Ruth Beesley Amanda Carnovale Giorgia Cazenave Pierre 2019 Connected macroalgal sediment systems blue carbon and food webs in the deep coastal ocean Ecological Monographs 89 3 e01366 doi 10 1002 ecm 1366 ISSN 1557 7015 Wernberg Thomas Filbee Dexter Karen December 2018 Grazers extend blue carbon transfer by slowing sinking speeds of kelp detritus Scientific Reports 8 1 17180 Bibcode 2018NatSR 817180W doi 10 1038 s41598 018 34721 z ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 6249265 PMID 30464260 Krause Jensen Dorte Lavery Paul Serrano Oscar Marba Nuria Masque Pere Duarte Carlos M 2018 06 30 Sequestration of macroalgal carbon the elephant in the Blue Carbon room Biology Letters 14 6 20180236 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2018 0236 PMC 6030603 PMID 29925564 Schiel David R May 2015 The biology and ecology of giant kelp forests Foster Michael S Oakland California ISBN 978 0 520 96109 8 OCLC 906925033 N Yeurt Antoine de Ramon Chynoweth David P Capron Mark E Stewart Jim R Hasan Mohammed A 2012 11 01 Negative carbon via Ocean Afforestation Process Safety and Environmental Protection Special Issue Negative emissions technology 90 6 467 474 doi 10 1016 j psep 2012 10 008 ISSN 0957 5820 S2CID 98479418 Rodriguez Ihosvani April 11 2012 Seaweed invading South Florida beaches in large numbers South Florida Sun Sentinel Retrieved 2012 04 11 Seaweed Power Ireland Taps New Energy Source alotofyada blogspot co uk 2008 06 24 Retrieved 9 April 2018 Chen Huihui Zhou Dong Luo Gang Zhang Shicheng Chen Jianmin 2015 Macroalgae for biofuels production Progress and perspectives Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 47 427 437 doi 10 1016 j rser 2015 03 086 The promise of Bioyarn from AlgiKnit MaterialDriven Seaweed Thatch naturalhomes org Retrieved 9 April 2018 Heuze V Tran G Giger Reverdin S Lessire M Lebas F 2017 Seaweeds marine macroalgae Feedipedia a programme by INRA CIRAD AFZ and FAO https www feedipedia org node 78 Last updated on May 29 2017 16 46 Seaweed shown to reduce 99 methane from cattle irishtimes com Retrieved 9 April 2018 Algues vertes la famille du chauffeur decede porte plainte contre X AFP retrieved 2010 04 22 in French Werner K A Marquart L Norton S A 2012 Lyngbya dermatitis toxic seaweed dermatitis International Journal of Dermatology 51 1 59 62 doi 10 1111 j 1365 4632 2011 05042 x PMID 21790555 S2CID 22375739 a b Buck Holly Jean April 23 2019 The desperate race to cool the ocean before it s too late MIT Technology Review Retrieved 2019 04 28 Further reading EditChristian Wiencke Kai Bischof ed 2012 Seaweed Biology Novel Insights into Ecophysiology Ecology amp Utilization Springer ISBN 978 3 642 28450 2 print ISBN 978 3 642 28451 9 eBook External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marine algae Michael Guiry s Seaweed Site information on all aspects of algae seaweed and marine algal biology SeaweedAfrica information on seaweed utilisation for the African continent Seaweed A chemical industry in Brittany in the past and today AlgaeBase a searchable taxonomic image and utilization database of freshwater marine and terrestrial algae including seaweed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Seaweed amp 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