| Literature DB >> 28429792 |
Xi Xiao1, Susana Agusti2, Fang Lin1, Ke Li1, Yaoru Pan1, Yan Yu1, Yuhan Zheng1, Jiaping Wu1, Carlos M Duarte2,3.
Abstract
China is facing intense coastal eutrophication. Large-scale seaweed aquaculture in China is popular, now accounting for over 2/3's of global production. Here, we estimate the nutrient removal capability of large-scale Chinese seaweed farms to determine its significance in mitigating eutrophication. We combined estimates of yield and nutrient concentration of Chinese seaweed aquaculture to quantify that one hectare of seaweed aquaculture removes the equivalent nutrient inputs entering 17.8 ha for nitrogen and 126.7 ha for phosphorus of Chinese coastal waters, respectively. Chinese seaweed aquaculture annually removes approximately 75,000 t nitrogen and 9,500 t phosphorus. Whereas removal of the total N inputs to Chinese coastal waters requires a seaweed farming area 17 times larger than the extant area, one and a half times more of the seaweed area would be able to remove close to 100% of the P inputs. With the current growth rate of seaweed aquaculture, we project this industry will remove 100% of the current phosphorus inputs to Chinese coastal waters by 2026. Hence, seaweed aquaculture already plays a hitherto unrealized role in mitigating coastal eutrophication, a role that may be greatly expanded with future growth of seaweed aquaculture.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28429792 PMCID: PMC5399451 DOI: 10.1038/srep46613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Timeline of aquaculture seaweed production in China (1978–2014).
Data Source: China Fishery Statistical Yearbook from 1979 to 201530. The production reported before 2003 includes wild collection of seaweed, which is about 2% of the aquaculture production, on average.
Figure 2Satellite Gao-Fen 2 image of the coastal area of Cang-nan county, Zhejiang province, southeastern China, showing large-scale seaweed (Pyropia) aquaculture farms.
SuperMap GIS 8 C (http://www.supermap.com/xhtml/SuperMap-GIS-8C.html) was used to generate this map.
Total nutrient removal by seaweed aquaculture in China and the nutrient removal capacity of Chinese seaweed farms km−2.
| Seaweed Production | 2.00 | million t DW |
| Seaweed Area | 1,250 | km2 |
| N concentration* | 3.76 ± 0.92 | % DW |
| P concentration* | 0.47 ± 0.19 | % DW |
| N removal | 75,371 ± 18,423 | t N year−1 |
| P removal | 9,496 ± 3,875 | t P year−1 |
| Seaweed Production | 1,604 | t DW |
| N concentration* | 3.76 ± 0.92 | % DW |
| P concentration* | 0.47 ± 0.19 | % DW |
| N removal | 60.31 | t N km−2 year−1 |
| P removal | 7.60 | t P km−2 year−1 |
| N input** | 3.38 | t N km−2 year−1 |
| P input** | 0.06 | t P km−2 year−1 |
| Seaweed Farm N Footprint area | 17.8 | km2 of coastal ocean removed of N inputs km−2 of seaweed farm |
| Seaweed Farm P Footprint area | 126.7 | km2 of coastal ocean removed of P inputs km−2 of seaweed farm |
The seaweed farm N and P footprint area refers to the km2 of Chinese coastal waters receiving nutrient inputs equivalent to those removed by one km2 of seaweed farms. *The average tissue nutrient concentrations of Chinese seaweed, as weighted per species (Tables S2–3); **Nutrient input from the inventory integrating the riverine and atmosphere resources, weighted by area of East China Sea and Yellow Sea1031.
Summary of case studies on nutrient removal by seaweed aquaculture in China, showing local biogeochemical significance of seaweed farms.
| Location | Seaweed Cultivation | Seawater Nutrient Concentration Reduction Efficiency | Ref | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bay | Region | Latitude | Year | Area (km2) | Species | NH4-N (%) | NO3-N (%) | PO4-P (%) | ||
| 1 | Radial sandbank, Jiangsu | South Yellow Sea | 120°′30′–121°40′E, 31°30′–33°40′N | 2012–2013 | N/A | 44% | 49% | 45% | Wu | |
| 2 | Xiangshan harbor, Zhejiang | East China Sea | 121°36′–121°37′ E, 29°32′ N | 2011 | 0.000054 (Cage study) | 22–61% | 24–47% | 22–58% | Huo | |
| 3 | Hangzhou Bay, Shanghai | East China Sea | 121°18′ E, 30°42′ N | 2006–2007 | 0.075 | 54% | 75% | 49% | Huo | |
| 4 | Lusi coast, Jiangsu | East China Sea | 121°35′ E, 32°05′ N | 2002–2004 | 3.00 | 50–94% | 21–38% | 42–67% | He | |
| 53% ± 7% | 47% ± 10% | 47% ± 3% | ||||||||