ELECTRONICAL LARVICULTURE NEWSLETTER ISSUE 92

15 NOVEMBER 1999


TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCY OF EARLY GROWTH OF TURBOT (SCOPHTHALMUS MAXIMUS L.) AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR DEVELOPMENTAL PROGRESS

F.-A. Weltzien, M. Planas, H.J. Fyhn-1999

Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 242 (2): 201-210
Abstract:

Growth in developing turbot larvae can be expressed independently of temperature when using effective day-degrees (D eff) as an index of development. The calculation of D eff is based on the principle of thermal summation whereby the rate of development is linearly related to the ambient temperature above a species-specific threshold temperature (T0) at which development is theoretically arrested. The T0 for turbot embryos is 5.3 C. The increase in wet body mass of developing turbot larvae at 14, 18, and 22 C can be aligned into a single exponential relationship regardless of incubation temperature when using D eff as the index of development. Previous attempts to relate physiological processes in poikilothermic animals, including fish, to incubation temperature are discussed.

(Department of Zoology, University of Bergen, Allegt. 41, N-5007 , Bergen, Norway)

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