Title: Sustainable Seaweed Harvest Management
1Sustainable Seaweed Harvest Management
2About FMC
- Diversified Chemical Company.
- Traded on NYSE, ticker symbol FMC
- Ag Chem, Industrial, Specialty Chemicals.
- 1 in carrageenan and alginate.
- Based in Philadelphia
3Red seaweed resource Brown seaweed resource
4Commercial Algae and Uses
- Hydrocolloids
- Fertilizer/Plant Food
- Human Food
- Nutraceuticals
- Spa/Beauty
- Medicinal uses
- BioFuel?
M. Indergaard (1983). The aquatic resource. I.
The wild marine plants a global bioresource. In
Cote, W. A. Biomass utilization. Vol. Plenum
Publishing Corporation, 137-168 From
www.seaweed.ie
5Commercial Algae and Uses
- Seaweed Industry in the Caribbean
- Seaweed Industry in the Caribbean
- Potential markets?
- Spa/beauty product for tourisms industry (cruise
ships). - Seaweed (Gracilaria or Eucheuma isiforme) for
salad in Asian fusion restaurants in U.S. - Live Rock
6Define Sustainable Harvest
- Reproduction and biomass assure future supply
- Ecosystem Beds continue to fulfill their role
of habitat, food, competition even with harvest. - Economic cost and quality
- Employment how many jobs? how much income?
7Case Study Norwegian Laminaria hyperborea
- Started in 1960s
- Company initiated plan.
- Based on understanding biology, ecology,
substrate and ecosystem - Pronova (now FMC BioPolymer) is the only
harvester. - 5 year cycle so 5 zones.
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9Vormedal
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
10Case Study Norwegian Laminaria hyperborea
- Government approved management plan in 2002.
- Must stay engaged with politicians and
environment/fisheries agencies.
11Case Study Chilean Sarcothalia crispata
- When started, in 1970s, based on collecting
beach material. - Mature plants, completed life cycle, harvested by
wave action. - Carrageenan yield and gel strength/viscosity were
very attractive.
12Case Study Chilean Sarcothalia crispata
- Increased demand led to diver harvesting in
1990s and more buyers. - Removing younger plants and substrate.
- Lower carrageenan yield and extract quality.
- Lower populations?
- Poor post harvest handling.
- Chile trying community based management plan.
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19Case StudyAustralian Durvillaea potatorum
- Kelp Industries Ltd. is only buyer.
- Harvested as storm toss on beach.
- Sustainable since 1976.
20Summary of Case Studies
- One buyer/harvester with active harvesting
(Norway). - Many buyers/harvesters with active harvesting
(Chile). - One buyer/harvester with passive harvesting
(Australia).
21Lessons from Fisheries Management
- One buyer/harvester and passive harvesting are
easily sustainable. - Numerous buyers/harvesters with active harvesting
needs good manageemnt and enforcement. How?
22Lessons from Fisheries Management
- Concessions?
- Education?
- Buyer based management (diver protocol, fishing
season)? - Co-Management?
- Hatchery seeded beds and leasing production areas.
- Quota?
- Community based management?
- Permits?
- Shares?
- Purchase right to harvest?
23Conclusion
- Ownership responsibility
- No shortcuts
- Corruption attitude leads to shortcuts which
ultimately destroy populations and ecosystems. - Approach can depend on level of quality
governance, cultural attitudes, financial
resources - With limited Government resources, probably best
to be self policed within biological constraints.
24Conclusions
- Learn from other natural resource management
plans not just seaweed. - Each situation is unique due to biology, culture
of residents, government resources - Need communication and work in progress
attitude. No one will get all they want and not
every initiative will work. But nothing
ventured, nothing gained.
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