Comparative Study of Growth and Carrageenan Content of Kappaphycus alvarezii (Doty) Doty in Pen Culture and Raft Culture in Palk Bay Waters of Ramanthapuram District, Southeast Coast of India

Authors

  • A. Perumal Annamalai University, India
  • P. Chellaiah Annamalai University, India
  • S. Rao Aquaculture Foundation, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31357/fesympo.v20i0.2521

Abstract

The cultivation of Kappaphycus alvarezii, a kappa carrageenan yielding red seaweed has
been going on in different locations of the world since 1970. This seaweed has been
introduced under field cultivation in more than 20 tropical countries. Philippines and
Indonesia contribute to 92% of the entire global harvest of 183,000 ton dry and the other
countries include Malaysia, China and Salmon Islands. In India, this alga has been introduced
in the second half of 1995 and the commercial cultivation has picked up from 2006. In order
to evolve an economically feasible method for commercial cultivation, this study was done
for a period of one year from April 2010 to March 2011 in sub-tropical waters on Palk Bay
side of Bay of Bengal of Ramanthapuram (Umiyalpuram, Mandapam) district on southeast
coast of India. The experiments were carried out by two methods, 1) PEN culture i.e;
cultivation in monolines enclosed with net and 2) raft method with net bottom. The minimum
crop yields of 241.10±9.52 and 228.90±14.89 kg FW raft-1 were obtained in May 2010 in
PEN culture and raft respectively with respective maximum ones of 325.30±11.26 and
293.10±9.83 kg FW raft-1 in October 2010. Similarly the minimum daily growth rates
(DGRs) of 3.09±0.09 and 2.97±0.09 % were found in May 2010 in PEN culture and raft
culture respectively with respective maximum daily growth rates (DGRs) of 3.76±0.08 % and
3.52±0.07% in October 2010. Environmental parameters like seawater temperature, salinity,
nitrate and phosphate were recorded and they were found to influence the growth of the
seaweed. The maximum carrageenan (SRC) content of 36.76±0.74% and 34.09±0.97% of dry
weight was found in August 2010 for PEN culture and raft culture respectively whereas the
minimum ones of 31.92±1.28% in December 2010 in Pen culture and 30.04±0.12% in
October 2010 in raft culture. The income with mean annual crop yields would be Rs. 18,257/-
and Rs. 16,063/- per month/person in PEN culture and raft respectively during the loan period
and with the respective ones of Rs. 19,257/- and Rs. 18,063/- per month/ person after the loan
period (after three years). In view of this, PEN culture was recommended for commercial
cultivation rather than raft one in the shallow waters and this was arrived at considering the
infra cost, replacement of the infra, cultivation operation, carrageenan yield and net income.

Keywords: Seaweed farming, Daily growth rate, Kappaphycus, Carrageenan, Crop yield

Author Biographies

A. Perumal, Annamalai University, India

Annamalai University, India

P. Chellaiah, Annamalai University, India

Annamalai University, India

S. Rao, Aquaculture Foundation, India

Aquaculture Foundation, India

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Published

2015-10-14

Issue

Section

Forestry and Natural Resource Management