ETHNOBOTANY OF SEAWEEDS - CLUES TO USES OF SEAWEEDS

Authors
Citation
Ia. Abbott, ETHNOBOTANY OF SEAWEEDS - CLUES TO USES OF SEAWEEDS, Hydrobiologia, 327, 1996, pp. 15-20
Citations number
7
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00188158
Volume
327
Year of publication
1996
Pages
15 - 20
Database
ISI
SICI code
0018-8158(1996)327:<15:EOS-CT>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
Extensive uses of fresh and dried seaweeds by coastal populations over the world can furnish clues to potential food and other uses of seawe eds, just as the first 'extraction' of a seaweed 'gelatin' now used fo r bacteriological purposes was discovered by a housewife in search of a pudding. Ethnic uses as food depend heavily on closely related speci es suitable for making cool, 'gelatinous' dishes or concoctions, or on species suitable for adding to soups or stews. Rarely, single species like cochajugo (Durvillea antarctica) in Chile and rimu (Durvillea an tarctica) in New Zealand point to different kinds of food preparation. Oriental cuisine incorporates many different species of seaweeds in a wide variety of ways, whereas commercial western uses depend upon ext racts of wall materials to suspend, emulsify or stabilize a broad vari ety of foods and products.