Sponge aquaculture offers the opportunity to provide a sustainable supply of bath and industrial sponges and mitigate the environmental effects of over-harvesting. The potential to develop sponge aquaculture is diverse given the variety of sponge species. However, amenability to culture and the selection of appropriate culture methods are species specific and need to be determined to provide the platform for commercial success. In this study the survival (in situ and ex situ), growth rates (in situ), and recovery processes (ex situ) were measured for explants of two sponge aquaculture candidates, Rhopaloeides odorabile Thompson et al. and Coscinoderma sp. [Phylum Porifera: Order Dictyoceratida: Family Spongiidae], cultured in the Palm Islan...
There is increasing interest in biotechnological production of marine sponge biomass owing to the di...
Sponges (Porifera) are the best source of marine natural products discovered so far, with great pote...
Explants of the tropical sponge Pseudosuberites andrewsi were fed with the marine diatom Phaeodactyl...
Sponge aquaculture offers the opportunity to provide a sustainable supply of bath and industrial spo...
Sponge aquaculture offers the opportunity to provide a sustainable supply of bath and industrial spo...
Global demand for bath sponges far exceeds supply and cannot be met by harvesting natural population...
Aquaculture of the bath sponge Coscinoderma matthewsi relies on collection of seed stock from the wi...
The distribution and abundance of dictyoceratid sponges was surveyed to a depth of 20 m at eleven lo...
Sponges, an important part of the reef ecosystem, are of commercial value for public aquaria, pharma...
Sponge global demand for industry and research needs far exceeds supply from the sea. Aquaculture is...
Cultivation of sponges is being explored to supply biomaterial for the pharmaceutical and cosmetics ...
In this study, novel methods were tested to culture the collagen-rich sponge Chondrosia reniformis N...
Not AvailableTwo species of marine sponges Stylissa massa and Liosina paradoxa were cultured in cage...
Aquaculture trials were conducted in the East Aegean Sea with Dysidea avara and Chondrosia reniformi...
Este artículo contiene 9 páginas, 12 figuras.Sponges are an important source of secondary metabolite...
There is increasing interest in biotechnological production of marine sponge biomass owing to the di...
Sponges (Porifera) are the best source of marine natural products discovered so far, with great pote...
Explants of the tropical sponge Pseudosuberites andrewsi were fed with the marine diatom Phaeodactyl...
Sponge aquaculture offers the opportunity to provide a sustainable supply of bath and industrial spo...
Sponge aquaculture offers the opportunity to provide a sustainable supply of bath and industrial spo...
Global demand for bath sponges far exceeds supply and cannot be met by harvesting natural population...
Aquaculture of the bath sponge Coscinoderma matthewsi relies on collection of seed stock from the wi...
The distribution and abundance of dictyoceratid sponges was surveyed to a depth of 20 m at eleven lo...
Sponges, an important part of the reef ecosystem, are of commercial value for public aquaria, pharma...
Sponge global demand for industry and research needs far exceeds supply from the sea. Aquaculture is...
Cultivation of sponges is being explored to supply biomaterial for the pharmaceutical and cosmetics ...
In this study, novel methods were tested to culture the collagen-rich sponge Chondrosia reniformis N...
Not AvailableTwo species of marine sponges Stylissa massa and Liosina paradoxa were cultured in cage...
Aquaculture trials were conducted in the East Aegean Sea with Dysidea avara and Chondrosia reniformi...
Este artículo contiene 9 páginas, 12 figuras.Sponges are an important source of secondary metabolite...
There is increasing interest in biotechnological production of marine sponge biomass owing to the di...
Sponges (Porifera) are the best source of marine natural products discovered so far, with great pote...
Explants of the tropical sponge Pseudosuberites andrewsi were fed with the marine diatom Phaeodactyl...