Abstract

Kappaphycus alvarezii is being introduced in several countries and in some of them there is a need to adapt this cultivation to periods with lethal temperatures, such as the 16–18 °C that occurs in the winter in southern Brazil. Moreover, there is the need to maintain the seedlings during this lethal temperature period. Considering the promising results obtained with the commercial powder extract of Ascophyllum nodosum (Acadian marine plant extract powder—AMPEP) treatment in the cultivation of K. alvarezii in vitro and in the sea allowing more resistance to epiphytes and increasing the growth rate and carrageenan yield, it was hypothesized that seedlings previously subjected to an AMPEP treatment could be more resilient to lethal temperatures. The daily growth rate and carrageenan yield and gel quality (gel strength and gel viscosity) of K. alvarezii in vitro previously treated with AMPEP were analyzed under temperature stress. The daily growth rates and the gel strengths of the AMPEP-treated samples were increased. In spite of the lower carrageenan yield and lower gel viscosity, the values were within the ones accepted by the carrageenan industry. Thus, the treatment of the seedlings of the K. alvarezii with AMPEP solution can be used as an alternative to lower temperature effects on crops as a preventive action for the cultivation of the seedlings in tanks and in the sea in periods of low temperatures at sea.

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