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Ocean Forests: Breakthrough Yields for Macroalgae

Authors :
Steven F. DiMarco
Don Piper
Scott C. James
Mark E. Capron
Kerri A. Whilden
Chris Webb
Reginald B. Blaylock
Kelly L. Lucas
Jim Stewart
Stacy A. Krueger-Hadfield
Michael D. Chambers
Corey Sullivan
Stephan Howden
Moo-Hyun Kim
Antoine Ramon De N'Yeurt
Zach Moscicki
Suzanne Fredericq
Binbin Wang
Igor Tsukrov
M. Robinson Swift
Maureen T. Brooks
Source :
OCEANS 2018 MTS/IEEE Charleston.
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
IEEE, 2018.

Abstract

The US Department of Energy Advanced Research Projects Agency - Energy (ARPA-E) MacroAlgae Research Inspiring Novel Energy Research (MARINER) program is encouraging technologies for the sustainable harvest of large funding research of macroalgae for biofuels at less than $80 per dry metric ton (DMT). The Ocean Forests team, led by the University of Southern Mississippi, is developing a complete managed ecosystem where nutrients are transformed and recycled. The team's designs address major bottlenecks in profitability of offshore aquaculture systems including economical moored structures that can withstand storms, efficient planting, managing and harvesting systems, and sustainable nutrient supply. The work is inspired by Lapointe [1] who reported yields of Gracilaria tikvahiae equivalent to 127 DMT per hectare per year (compared with standard aquaculture systems in the range of 20 to 40 DMT/ha/yr). This approach offers the potential for breakthrough yields for many macroalgae species. Moreover, mini-ecosystems in offshore waters create communities of macroalgae, shellfish, and penned finfish, supplemented by visiting free-range fish that can increase productivity, produce quality products, and create jobs and income for aquafarmers. Additional benefits include reduced disease in fish pens, cleaning contaminated coastal waters, and maximizing nutrient recycling. Cost projections for a successful, intensive, scaled system are competitive with current prices for fossil fuels.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
OCEANS 2018 MTS/IEEE Charleston
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c493d0018e64e83c12539aa10b467096
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/oceans.2018.8604586