Title: SeaweedAfrica
1SeaweedAfrica
- Underpinning Sustainable Ecosystem
- Management of Seaweed Resources in Africa
Expanding the Seaweed Database
2European Partners
- Ireland Martin Ryan Institute, National
University of Ireland, Galway. Co-ordinator - Prof. Michael Guiry
- Dr Róisín Nash
- Sandy Lawson
- Sweden University of Stockholm
- Dr Mats Björk Karolina Bauer
- Strong Links to the University of Dar Es
Salaam,Tanzania (Sware Semesi, Matern Moltera) - Portugal CIIMAR
- Prof. Isabel Sousa Pinto
- Andreia Braga-Henriques
- Two subcontractors
www.seaweedafrica.org
3Subcontractors (via Portugal)
- Mozambique University of Eduardo Mondlane
- Dr Salomão Bandeira
- Henriques Jacinto Balidy
- Brazil University of São Paulo
- Prof. Eurico Cabral De Oliveira Filho
www.seaweedafrica.org
4African Partners
- South Africa University of the Western Cape
- Prof. Derek Keats
- Martin Cocks
- Dr Neil Griffin
- South Africa University of Cape Town
- Prof. John Bolton
- Dr Rob Anderson (Marine and Coastal Management)
- Dr AJ Smit Dr Enrico Trochin
- Kenya IOI-East Africa
- Mr Patrick Gwada
- Namibia University of Namibia
- Mr Lineekela Kandjengo
- Dr Alan Critchley (France)
www.seaweedafrica.org
5Basic Facts
- Funded through the INCO-DEV section of FP5
- Duration of the project Nov 2001 - Oct 2005
- Funded to the sum of almost 1,000,000
- 6 partner countries ( 2 subcontractor countries)
involved - It is an expansion of AlgaeBase (One of the five
largest biological databases in the world)
www.algaebase.org - AlgaeBase contains
- 34,588 bibliographical references,
- 2,314 common names,
- 109,473 distributional records,
- 17,657 etymological entries,
- 5,785 genera,
- 2,879 images,
- 61,738 species
- (15th August 2005)
www.seaweedafrica.org
6Basic Facts
- Despite its enormous coastline and burgeoning
maritime populations, Africa has not seen major
developments of a seaweed industry except in
Tanzania and South Africa, and recently in
Mozambique.
- SeaweedAfrica is prioritizing the entry of
information from Africa due to the relative
inaccessibility of knowledge of seaweeds form
Africa despite the incredible biodiversity which
is particularly high on the east coast.
www.seaweedafrica.org
7Basic Facts
- In some areas, such as Namibia and the west coast
of South Africa, upwelling of cold water shows
enormous potential for maricultural development
if the right algae and management techniques can
be found.
Therefore one of the aims of SeaweedAfrica is
To increase access to information on seaweeds,
allowing best practice in sustainable seaweed
farming
8SeaweedAfrica objectives
- To aid and accelerate seaweed aquaculture
through developing the seaweed database to
include information on - Seaweed uses
- Common names
- Commercial usage Aquaculture Harvesting
- Ecological data
- Regulation and legislation information
- In other words to assemble knowledge currently
dispersed particularly information that pertains
to the development of an African industry
9 Seaweed - diversity
Red Rhodophyta c. 6,000 species
- Green
- Chlorophyta
- c. 12,000 species
- Brown
- Heterokontophyta
- c.2,000 species
10Constituents of Seaweeds
- Fatty acids
-
- Sterols
- Lipids
-
- Acids
- Alkaloids
- Amines
- Cellulose
- Enzymes
- Glycosides
- Volatile Constituents
- Vitamins
- Phenolic compounds
- Sugar alcohols
- Steroids
- Amino acids
- Proteins
- Peptides
- Pigments
- Phytohormones
- Inorganic Constituents
- Antibacterial, Antibiotic, Antifungal and
Antiviral Substances
11www.seaweedafrica.org
An example of a search on the site for the uses
associated with Gracilaria gracilis
Front page as seen on the web
- You can enter a search for
- Species name such as Gracilaria gracilis
- Common name
- Country
- Ecological / aquaculture or harvest records
12www.seaweedafrica.org
You will then be given a number of choices to
search for further information on this species
e.g. uses and compounds highlighted in red above.
If you click on this link you will be provided
with a list of the seaweeds uses and their
associated compounds.
13www.seaweedafrica.org
A list of uses and coumpounds found associated
with Gracilaria gracilis. Further information can
be found by clicking on the book icon on the
right hand side.
14An example of the Literature on Seaweed Uses
All information in SeaweedAfrica is traceable
back to a published source.
- Chapman, V.J. Chapman, D.J. (1980) Seaweeds and
their uses. Chapman and Hall London - Hoppe, H.A. Levring, T. (1982) Marine algae in
pharmaceutical science. 309 pages Walter de
Gruyter Berlin/New York - Lembi, C.A. Waaland, J.R. (1988) Algae and
human affairs. vii 590 pages Cambridge
University Press Cambridge - Levring, T., Hoppe, H.A. Schmid, O.J. (1969)
Marine algae. A survey of research and
utilization. vii 421 pages Cram, De Gruyter
Co. Hamburg
www.seaweedafrica.org
15Potential of SeaweedAfrica
- Resource distribution
- Allows any country to identify what species occur
on their coast - Uses potential uses of different species
- Important for countries who wish to initiate a
seaweed utilisation strategy - Current Resource Yields
- Scale of harvesting is unappreciated by many
- Current information on yields will act as a tool
to illustrate the potential sustainable
exploitation that can be achieved - Resource distribution
- Allows any country to identify what species
occur on their coast
www.seaweedafrica.org
16www.seaweedafrica.org
Potential of SeaweedAfrica
- Resource distribution
- Allows any country to identify what species occur
on their coast - Uses potential uses of different species
- Important for countries who wish to initiate a
seaweed utilisation strategy - Current Resource Yields
- Scale of harvesting is unappreciated by many
- Current information on yields will act as a tool
to illustrate the potential sustainable
exploitation that can be achieved
17www.seaweedafrica.org
Potential of SeaweedAfrica
- Ecological Information
- Information on life histories of
commercialspecies is vital - Preserving biodiversity
- May provide a secondary crop
- Information on associated species
- To ensure maximum efficiency of aquaculture
initiatives - To facilitate ecological/acceptable harvesting
practices - Methods of cultivation Harvesting
- Help to amalgamate different methods to produce
the most appropriate technology - Regulation management
- First point of contact country
- Legislation - country
18Who will benefit?
- The expanded database aims to satisfy the needs
of policy makers wishing to initiate sustainable
seaweed production or effectively regulate
already existing seaweed production whether that
production be by harvesting or aquaculture. - Other groups that will benefit from the
information include universities, industry,
government agencies, multidisciplinary research
institutions, libraries, museums,
non-governmental organisations and interested
individuals.
www.seaweedafrica.org