Perfilado de sección

    • Kelps have a microscopic generation (gametophytes) and macroscopic generation (sporophytes), and we cultivate and harvest the macroscopic generation for use.
      Sporophyte maturation is a vital phenomenon essential not only for supporting reproduction in natural seaweed beds and maintaining seaweed beds, but also for securing the seed stock required for the mass seedling production for seaweed cultivation.
      Therefore, we are conducting research on the various conditions and mechanisms that lead to the success of sporophyte maturation, as well as the development of artificial control technology.


    • The kelp we see in our daily life corresponds to the macroscopic generation (called sporophytes) in the kelp life cycle.
      The maturation of the macroscopic generation plays an important role in the transition from the macroscopic generation to microgeneration (gametophytes).
      The surface of the body rises as the sporophyte matures, forming a group of reproductive organs called the sorus. In the process, meiosis produces germ cells with two flagella, called zoospores.
      The released zoospores transition to the microgeneration (gametophytes) by landing on a new substrate.
      The gametophyte generation is sexual, and the male and female gametophytes mature, returning to macroscopic generation after the fertilization of each germ cell.