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Hanging gardens - do floating kelp farm communities resemble natural kelp forests?

17 Jun 2025 - Dr. Trine Bekkby, Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA) | 10h00 | Hybrid Seminar
Hanging gardens - do floating kelp farm communities resemble natural kelp forests?
CASUAL SEMINAR IN BIODIVERSITY AND EVOLUTION

A growing need for food is causing increased interest for seaweed farming globally. This requires the knowledge of the industry’s effects on the marine environment. We therefore aimed to explore the communities hosted by a kelp farm compared to that of wild kelp forests. The study was performed in mid-western Norway. Kelp associated fauna were collected from farmed kelp (Saccharina latissima and Alaria esculenta), in wild kelp forests (S. latissima, A. esculenta, and Laminaria hyperborea), and from fauna traps in the water column. The study showed that the kelp farm had lower taxa abundance and richness and a lower biodiversity than the wild kelp forests. Nonetheless, the farmed kelp hosted many associated species, with communities different from what was found on ropes without kelp (i.e., in the water column). The fauna communities among the farmed kelp were more similar to what was found in the wild L. hyperborea kelp forest than to its wild counterparts. The difference between the fauna communities of ‘old’ and ‘young’ farmed kelp (grown for 3 and 7 months, respectively) was not significant, but the fauna was dominated by the isopod species Idotea pelagica in the young forest and by amphipods, mainly belonging to the genus Caprella, in the older. The study contributes to our knowledge of kelp farms’ ecological role in the marine environment, which is of importance for today’s management as well as for ensuring a sustainable future development of the kelp farming industry. 

Trine Bekkby is working as a senior scientist at the Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA), with main focus on marine benthic and coastal ecology, variation in space and changes with time - particularly focusing on the biodiversity, structure, function and restoration of blue forests (such as kelp forests, seagrass meadows and rockweed beds). This includes field and mesocosm experiments, mapping and monitoring, biostatistics and spatial analyses.

[Host: Fernando Pádua Silva e Lima, Marine Ecology, Diversity and Change - COASTALWARMING]

Zoom Link: https://videoconf-colibri.zoom.us/j/94166628246
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