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Algaculture

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Algaculture

All of us here at Our City Forest works with trees and shrubs every day. Today on this blog we will be discussing plants’ closely related friends: Algae! In particular, algaculture.


So what is algaculture? Algaculture is the farming of various algae species. But let’s start with the basics; what even is algae? Algae is defined as “a plant or plantlike organism of any of several phyla, divisions, or classes of chiefly aquatic usually chlorophyll-containing nonvascular organisms of polyphyletic origin that usually include the green, yellow-green, brown, and red algae in the eukaryotes and especially formerly the cyanobacteria in the prokaryotes” (Merriam-Webster Dictionary). Now you may be a bit confused by that definition, and honestly, you should be. Truth be told, there’s a lot of vague blanket terminology used to define algae, and that’s because the taxonomical classifications of algae are still changing all the time!

Basically to sum it all up: algae is similar to a plant, but not actually a plant. The main reason why being that all plants belong to the Kingdom Planate, while all algae does not. In addition, plants are multicellular, vascular, and mostly on land. Algae on the other hand is multi or unicellular, non-vascular, and mostly aquatic. It also belongs to various Kingdoms. Kingdom Plantae includes the chlorophytes and rhodophytes (green and red algae), the Kingdom Chromista contains phaeophytes (brown algae), the Kingdom Protista is home to Euglenophytes (Euglena), and the Kingdom Bacteria is where cyanobacteria (blue green algae) can be found. Plants and algae do have two major characteristics in common though, one being that they are both eukaryotes, and the other being that they are both photosynthetic and therefore contain chlorophyll/chloroplasts.

Taking a moment to dive deeper into the details of algae, two major types emerge: Macroalgae and Microalgae.  Macroalgae is large and often multicellular. Common examples include kelp and seaweed. 

Pictured: herbarium pressing of Giant Kelp.

Pictured: herbarium pressing of Giant Kelp.

Conversely, microalgae is microscopic and unicellular, or in chains / groups. A common example would be phytoplankton.

Pictured: various types of microalgae.

Pictured: various types of microalgae.

Some of the most popular species used in Algaculture are: Seaweed (Nori, etc.), Spirulina, Chlorella, Kelp, Chondrus Crispus aka ‘Irish sea moss’, and many of the red alga (Rhodophyta) because they produce carrageenan.

But how is algae farmed? To grow the alga aquaculture techniques are used. It is produced in ponds or tanks by adding nutrients and carbon dioxide to the system. Once harvested, the alga must be dried. There are three major methods to accomplish this by: Flocculation, Centrifugation, and Microscreening.

Flocculation is when solids come out of suspension (in a floc/flake) spontaneously or due to an added clarifying agent. A big downfall of this is that it is very costly and therefore only utilized by large scale industries.

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Centrifugation is a process that separates algae from water. The machine spins and forces the algae up against the sides, forming a paste. The water flies to the top as it spins rather than staying with the algae against the sides. This is a medium cost operation.

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Microscreening is a process of membrane separation via filtration system. It utilizes the properties of water – cohesion and tension – to induce the Capillary effect, thus allowing water to “climb up” / work against gravity and separate out from the alga. Then, a fine mesh screen is used to sift algae out.

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Now what happens the all this algae once it is isolated and dried? It has an unbelievable number of purposes! Algae is in the food we eat, colorants/dyes, fertilizer, beauty products, pharmaceuticals, traditional medicine, and more. For example, spirulina and chlorella specifically are dubbed as “Superfoods”. Carrageenan and Agar are extracted and used in many food products as a stabilizer/thickener. In the beauty industry algae is hailed as a miracle worker due to its vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, cell renewal (anti-aging) ability, and its anti-inflammatory and clarifying properties. Beta Carotene is extracted for use from the carotenoids in the algae. When it comes to medicinal properties, algae contains Omega 3s, antioxidants, and it is anticancer and antiviral. Many of these properties can be seen listed on ingredient labels of hundreds of products! It can also be used to make bioplastic -  such as biodegradable water bottles or utensils - as well as biofuel. A major benefit of all this algae is carbon sequestration. Ocean-based algae account for  45% to 50% of carbon dioxide absorbed by the biosphere! Although they are small, their short life cycles make them efficient. Research has found that algae powered bioreactors are 400x times more effective than trees at absorbing CO2.

Pictured: a photo from the article “The crop that put women on top in Zanzibar” from BBC.

Pictured: a photo from the article “The crop that put women on top in Zanzibar” from BBC.

A final note about how cool algae is, is what the rise in demand is doing for women in other countries! It has become an innovative income for women who have traditionally not worked and been placed in a role which leaves them indoors. As men have chosen to stick with fishing and tourism, the women have started to farm algae nearshore in places like Zanzibar and the Bengali Coast. This allows them to get out of the house, socialize with one another, and make a profit. An article that I like very much regarding this can be read at the following link: https://www.bbc.com/news/stories-44688104.  

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Interview with AmeriCorps Service Member Emma

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Interview with AmeriCorps Service Member Emma

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Meet one of our local Our City Forest (OCF) full time Americorps service members: Emma. She has been serving with OCF for three (yes, three!) terms now. Her sister used to work here at OCF as well. 

She is part of the Lawn Busters team at OCF, and is often busy designing landscapes and converting properties into beautiful native gardens. In this interview we talk about what its been like to serve with AmeriCorps for the past 3 terms, giving back to the community, and the future beyond. 

We interviewed Emma to find out more about her time with OCF.

  1. Do you have a favorite shrub/tree?

    Emma: Oh my gosh that's such a good question, I think that I do. Well I have a lot of favorites, but one that just came to mind is Salvia Bee’s Bliss. It's very beautiful. A low growing sage. The bees love it, and I love the bees.

  2. Tell us about yourself. Anything you want people to know about you?

    Emma: I’m from the Hudson Valley in New York State. I went to a small liberal arts school in the western part of North Carolina called Warren Wilson college. It's a really special school because its a work college so every student on campus also had a job on campus. That made it a really meaningful, unique experience and I really loved it. I also learned about beekeeping there, which has become a very big passion of mine since then. I’m a beekeeper and have been keeping bees for three or four years now and I started doing that working at the garden on my college campus. I was caring for the hives there. I've been a member with OCF for a year and a half now, and this is my third Americorps term at Our City Forest. 

  3. What made you want to become an AmeriCorps member?
    Emma:
    I think that AmeriCorps was really appealing to me because it provides  great job experience. I also feel really inspired by giving back to the community that I’m a part of. I just wanted to try something new and engage closely with the community. 

  4. How did you get involved with OCF?
    Emma:
    Well, actually, my sister was an AmeriCorps member for two years and afterwards she was hired as the Nursery Manager and she really really loved her experience and would talk to me about it a lot. I was at a transitional time in my life and I wasn't exactly sure what I wanted to do, so she encouraged me to apply for OCF specifically. It sounded like a lot of fun and a great experience.

  5. What is your favorite part about being a full time service member here at Our City Forest?
    Emma:
    It's definitely building really strong connections with community members and volunteers. I think that's the most important thing that we do; engaging the community so that they can continue to support our mission by being more sensitive to their water usage, learning about why native plants are important, why creating ecosystems are important, the benefits of trees, and all those things. That's probably the most rewarding part for me, to be able to teach people about all those things and engage them in what we do. 

  6. What made you want to sign on for multiple terms?
    Emma:
    I felt like after my first term, which was just a six month term, I was just getting started taking advantage of all the opportunities that Our City Forest has to offer. I felt like I had already learned so much in such a short amount of time, that I really had only just started to know about the plants and all the things that we do. I felt like I wasn't really done learning yet, and I've just had such a wonderful experience here and it's been so much fun and I've met so many wonderful special people that will be lifelong friends. I just cant stop serving. 

  7. So before you started serving you had no background in urban forestry or anything related?
    Emma:
    I had done a bunch of landscaping work and some farming too on the garden at my campus. So that was agriculture based. But I've always been interested in plants and growing plants, just not specifically California natives.

  8. What advice/tips would you tell someone who is interested in joining the Our City Forest AmeriCorps team?
    Emma:
    I would say just to take in as much as you possibly can. And, don't expect that you're going to know everything right away. Just give yourself space to learn from others and be patient with yourself. It may seem really overwhelming at first; I showed up with very little knowledge about the plants or how to plant a tree. The amount of knowledge that I’ve learned just by keeping my eyes open and being receptive to other people's perspectives has been a really really meaningful experience for me. 

  9. Where do you see yourself taking the experience you’ve gotten from Our City Forest in the future?
    Emma:
    I think I'll always pursue a career that has a close community engagement aspect to it. I think that it's really really important at this time that we’re all living in to form deep connections with the communities that we’re a part of. These are skills I will use in the future no matter what I do. I also hope to pursue a career in landscaping design, and I’ve learned a lot about that by serving here.

  10. Have you met someone through Our City Forest that has inspired you?
    Emma:
    So many people! I would say the person who has made the biggest impact on me is definitely Edgar (our Lawnbuster and Stewardship Manager). I think that he’s just a really really amazing person and a great leader and mentor. I really admire the way that he teaches people with such a peaceful attitude. He gives people space to figure things out on their own. I've just learned so much from him and I'm really grateful for that. I also really appreciate all of the other members I’ve met here too and how passionate everyone is about our common goal to make this world a better place. 

Thank you to Emma for all that you do with Our City Forest, we deeply appreciate your continued dedication and service to OCF, and wish you all the best in the future! 

If Emma’s interview inspired you to become an Americorps member, head to http://www.ourcityforest.org/americorps-openings to sign up for one of the two upcoming service terms, starting on January 14th and March 24th. Or, if you’d like to volunteer with us, you can check out various volunteering opportunities at ourcityforest.org/calendar !

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Interview with Tree Amigo Kylee

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Interview with Tree Amigo Kylee

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Meet one of your local OCF Tree Amigos: Kylee. She was once a volunteer with us, and now she is one of our stellar Tree Amigos (along with her sister, Sabrina, who has recently completed our Tree Amigo class). 

What does it take to be a Tree Amigo? To become a Tree Amigo you must go through a 5 session training. The training consists of an overview of our organization, a community nursery work day, a community planting event, a tree care and stewardship class, and a Lawn Busters lawn conversion project. On most Saturdays, Kylee can be found at our Nursery, hard at work and dressed in full Our City Forest uniform. In this interview we talk about getting involved with OCF, serving the community, and other topics. 

We interviewed Kylee to find out more about her time with OCF. 

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  1. Tell us about yourself. Anything you want people to know about you?
    Kylee:
    I am a senior at Piedmont Hills High School. I started volunteering with Our City Forest the summer between my sophomore and junior year because I couldn't find a job and I knew Maddy was an AmeriCorps member and so she told me I should go here and I started going...and it was the summer so I had nothing to do [laughs], so I came Thursday, Friday and Saturday almost every week at the nursery and it caught a passion with me. I've always liked the outdoors and I live really close to Alum Rock Park, I go there, like, every Sunday and so I want to major in environmental engineering and I want to work in Habitat Restoration when I grow up. 

  2. Are you from the San Jose area?
    Kylee:
    Yes, I’ve lived in the same house all my life...there's a trailhead to Alum Rock Park right in my neighborhood and it's a very special place and the whole San Jose area is really important to me. 

  3. So you like volunteering in your own community? 
    Kylee:
    Yeah, because I know that it's going to help people who are around me; I see the Our City Forest trees at school and every time I walk by I’m so proud because I can say ‘I’m part of that’. 

  4. What made you want to become a Tree Amigo?
    Kylee:
    I became a Tree Amigo because the nursery workers pressured me into doing it [laughs]. Every time I would see them they would say ‘You should sign up for the Tree Amigo course!’ so I finally did it and said ‘We’ll see what happens’.

  5. And are you glad you did?
    Kylee:
    Yeah I'm super glad I did it. I get to do so much more stuff now. It’s so much more fun; I mean, it was already fun doing volunteer stuff but now I can like lead other groups of volunteers and I’m friends with all the workers. And I can pressure other people, like my sister, into being a Tree Amigo. I get to wear the shirt and people ask me questions. 

  6. What is your favorite part about being a Tree Amigo?
    Kylee:
    I think my favorite part about being a Tree Amigo, like above being a normal volunteer, is knowing how important I am to the organization and how much importance my work has, and like being more involved I started seeing and going to more things and seeing all the people that are affected - like going to a Lawn Bust and seeing the lady we did the lawn bust for and how happy she was. Going to school and seeing the trees at school. Going to plantings everywhere, and seeing all the people working at the nursery, it kind of gives you a better idea of like the big scale stuff thats going on.

    So knowing the impact of your work is really helpful and beneficial to people? 
    Kylee:
    Yeah it's so much more involved when you're a Tree Amigo. I’ve taught a bunch of people how to tie trees and do transplants and stuff.

  7. What made you really originally wanted to become a Tree Amigo rather than just staying a volunteer?
    Kylee:
    Well you do a lot of the same stuff when you're a volunteer, and I had sort of started doing some more Tree Amigo type things; Vera took me into the greenhouse and all this sort of more specialized and individual things you can do without a big group. And I thought that was really cool because I can work in the greenhouse and I can do things by myself because I know I'm trusted to do all these special activities that may be even more helpful than what day-to-day volunteers do. 

  8. What advice/tips would you tell someone who is interested in volunteering (or becoming a TA) that has never worked with OCF before?
    Kylee:
    I would say try it a few times, because first of all, I haven't seen anyone from my Tree Amigo lesson since the graduation. I feel like some people do it and then just think they’re done. You don't realize how impactful it can be for you if you keep coming back, when you keep coming back and everyone says ‘hi’ to you and you know you're a known presence there. It's so much better when you can look and go ‘I helped fix these things’ and ‘ I helped plant these trees’ and you can see it growing. Even if you’re a volunteer and it’s been one day, and you’re weeding and working in the brush pile and you're like ‘oh this kind of sucks’ you don’t realize how if you keep coming back and coming back you realize ‘I did this thing’ or ‘I fixed that’ even though maybe it didn't feel fun at first, once you realize everything you're doing is helping other people and helping the whole organization move along you feel so much more enlightened. 

  9. Is that what made you want to come back, instead of just stopping right after graduation
    Kylee:
    Yeah, I don't know, it was my mom's birthday and then I went to the Tree Planting with my sister and missed two weeks and I thought ‘I need to go back, they’re going to miss me’. I feel an obligation for it now, it's not the strongest obligation, I’m not going to lose my mind - but I do feel a need to come back and keep working. It's not a bad thing, it's a good thing. 

  10. Do you have a favorite shrub/tree?
    Kylee:
    I have to kind of say the Norfolk Pine just because it's kind of like a staple of the nursery, and how much Mike showed it to me. I love it, it’s weird looking, it has this plastic feeling and pine needles on it. It's just so fun looking, it looks like a cartoon. And if I had to pick a second one, it would be the gingko because they’re also kind of funny looking; I planted one last week it was so cute. I love their kind of weird almost foot shaped leaves, and they just have so many trivia facts about them. So I think those are my top two. But all of them are so cool. 

  11. Where do you see yourself taking the experience you’ve gotten from OCF in the future?Kylee: Well I see taking it into school when I go to college, because I know that a lot of the information I have from this can coincide with environmental engineering. It's about using your knowledge to rebuild the environment after people have done bad things to it. One thing they did, in all the mines in Colorado, they used; environmental engineers were the people who fixed the runoff that was affecting the water and stuff like that. So I know that I can use knowledge of the environment and trees and all that sort of stuff to help me in my career.  

  12. Yeah, it’s going to be super helpful. A lot of AmeriCorps members here are environmental studies or science majors. It all connects.
    Kylee:
    Yeah, following your passion, hopefully I'm heading in the right place. I think that's what Our City Forest has shown me, its shown me that this is the thing I want to do. Cause I was always kind of ‘ehhh I don't know what I want to do’ but then I found this and I think this is so much fun; I want to keep doing this, I don't want to stop. 

  13. Have you met someone through volunteering that has inspired you?
    Kylee:
    Thats hard, because everyone is so cool. Nancy has always been super supportive; I really love her. When we go to events and stuff I always talk with Nancy, I always hang out with her. And the original nursery workers I worked with, like Vera and Andy and Mike and Jill - those guys, they really inspired me to keep working hard and keep trying at this. And Maddy too. There's a lot of people, there's not just one. The environment that everyone creates as a whole is so supportive and fun and everyone wants you to succeed. But if you make a mistake transplanting a tree no one will beat you up for it, they'll just say ‘hey let's fix this and let's keep going, we’re doing great’ - nothing is ever a problem. It’s such a great environment. 

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Kylee is right, Tree Amigos help Our City Forest in a major way and we couldn’t do all that we do without them. Thank you to Kylee for all that you do with Our City Forest, we hope you continue on your path to becoming an environmental engineer and inspire others to care for their urban forest! 

 

If Kylee’s interview inspired you to become a Tree Amigo, head to ourcityforest.org/tree-amigo to sign up for our 5 week class starting on January 11th or check out our upcoming volunteering opportunities at ourcityforest.org/calendar !

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