Thank you so much
Brilliant
Can you grow kelp at home?
No, you can grow them, they need saltwater. But maybe in the future. We just don’t know.
Mussel farming is good too
Plant creatures called epiphytes and associated microbia are a tribute to smaller forms of marine amimal foodstuff; from when they are young and planktonic right down to settlement phase and beyond through survival. That's an ecosystem service worth auditing specifically. Distinguishing between diatoms, cyanobacteria and algae is possible; yielding diatoms desirable (fatty acid rich). Manipulations to skew the population can consist in interspersing sachets containing bentonite forms of diatom skeletons. How else to skew towards diatom dominated consortia? We know there is a spectral preference that is distinct between the three and can subsidise that 'colour' of light specifically.
Kelp farmers are the coolest!
If you like this topic, please check out our seaweed project:
ua-cam.com/video/Sx49H_4l8I8/v-deo.html
3:07 caht see a vid about kelp without Korea hiding somewhere
Thus is patently ridiculous, utterly stupid, and kelp won't grow everywhere.
One problem is that the amount of iodine in kelp is quite variable and can be extremely high, which is why we mostly use kelp granules sparingly. If you were going to consume a lot of it, you'd need to be sure you weren't getting too much iodine (over 900 mcg/day for adults). Some seaweed varieties, like Nori, wakame and Arame have a small or reasonable amount. Hijiki contains too much arsenic to be safe.
The body has evolved something majestic to processing excess minerals from food its called peeing, ir only becomes a problem when you tske minerals in pills, cause it can't be processed.