The effect of light and temperature on the growth and photosynthesis of the Japanese agarophyte, Gracilariopsis chorda (Gracilariaceae, Rhodophyta), was determined to better understand its physiology so that we could identify candidates for mass cultivation. Above the photosynthetic active radiation of 66 μmol photons m−2 s−1, photosynthetic rates saturated for all strains that were collected from six different locations (Hokkaido, Chiba, Tokushima, Saga, Kagoshima, and Okinawa); furthermore, either photosynthesis or growth was observed at all temperature treatments examined in our study (4–32 °C for photosynthesis, 16–32 °C for growth experiments). We identified a temperature range for optimal photosynthesis and growth, which occurred within 20.1–29.1 °C and roughly correlated with the water temperatures of the collection locations and strongly suggests that this species tolerates a wide variety of water temperature. In particular, the Kagoshima strain had the widest range of optimal temperatures (20.8–29.1 °C), whereas the Saga strain had the narrowest range (23.1–27.3 °C). It is important to note that all the optimal temperature ranges overlapped among the strains; therefore, no definitive distinction can be determined. The broad tolerance to temperatures commonly observed from northern to southern Japan suggests that the cultivation of this species should succeed during spring to summer in the majority of the coastal regions in Japan.