Abstract

An experimental farm has been installed in the Kiel Fjord, western Baltic Sea, aiming at the development of a sustainable production process for Fucus species (Fucus vesiculosus, Fucus serratus). The envisaged cultivation method includes the unattached rearing of thalli in baskets deployed in the sea and their vegetative reproduction. Fertility (i.e., receptacle formation) is expected to be problematic for this approach, because receptacles are terminated in growth and degrade after gamete release. In culture experiments, natural fertility led to only minimal overall growth in F. vesiculosus and even weight loss in F. serratus. Therefore, we tested if long-term unattached cultivation of formerly attached thalli leads to a lowering of fertility by an acclimatization process. However, fertility after 1 and 2 years of unattached cultivation was statistically equal and still comparable to the high fertility of attached populations. Furthermore, we tested if the only known naturally unattached population in the western Baltic Sea near Glücksburg, which remains largely infertile in the wild, keeps its low fertility if put under culture conditions. During an experimental 1-year cultivation, thalli from this population remained almost entirely vegetative (2.0 ± 3.1% fertile apices). Hence, the Glücksburg population is a promising source of aquacultural seedling biomass. Yet, further tests are necessary to check, if the fertility remains low over several years of cultivation. If unattached populations are used as source for commercial cultures, the collection of seedling material should always be accompanied by strong measures to ensure the continued integrity of these valuable habitats.

Highlights

  • The brown algal genus Fucus is known for its high content in bioactive ingredients like phlorotannins and fucoxanthin (Catarino et al 2018)

  • An experimental Fucus farm has been established in the Kiel fjord at the German Baltic Sea coast aiming at the development of a method for the production of local Fucus species (Fucus vesiculosus, Fucus serratus) in aquaculture

  • Effect of fertility on growth in culture. Both species showed strong growth when the initial culture biomass consisted only of vegetative thalli, but showed only marginal growth or even weight loss, when the biomass consisted of thalli with the typical fertility found in attached wild populations (F. vesiculosus: 80%, F. serratus: 70%), or when the biomass consisted of thalli with 100% fertility (Fig. 3)

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Summary

Introduction

The brown algal genus Fucus is known for its high content in bioactive ingredients like phlorotannins and fucoxanthin (Catarino et al 2018). The entire market demand is satisfied by biomass harvested from wild populations, e.g., in France and Ireland German companies desire regional biomass, because “regionality” is a valuable claim in the targeted markets The only means to obtain regional biomass from the German Baltic Sea coast is aquaculture. Fucus aquaculture could potentially become necessary in other countries, too, if the market pull increases (Cherry et al 2019), or environmental change puts wild populations at risk (Nicastro et al 2013). An experimental Fucus farm has been established in the Kiel fjord at the German Baltic Sea coast aiming at the development of a method for the production of local Fucus species (Fucus vesiculosus, Fucus serratus) in aquaculture

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