ELECTRONICAL LARVICULTURE NEWSLETTER ISSUE 94

15 DECEMBER 1999


FEEDING, PHYSIOLOGY AND GROWTH RESPONSES IN FIRST-FEEDING GILTHEAD SEABREAM (SPARUS AURATA L.) LARVAE IN RELATION TO PREY DENSITY

G. Parra, M. Yufera-1999

Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 243 (1): 1-15
Abstract:

The effects of prey density (0.1, 1 and 10 rotifer/ml) on feeding, oxygen uptake, growth, survival and energetic efficiencies in Sparus aurata larvae were investigated. Dry weights and total lengths at day 15 after hatching were similar in larvae fed with 10 and 1 rotifer/ml but were significantly higher than in larvae fed with 0.1 rotifer/ml. These differences were a consequence of a delay in starting feeding and growth in larvae fed with the lowest rotifer concentrations tested. Growth rates were similar in larvae fed on 0.1 and 1 rotifer/ml, while larvae fed with 10 rotifers/ml showed the smallest growth rate. Survival decreased markedly (from 91 to 7%) when prey density decreased. Ingestion rates of the actively feeding larvae increased with age at the three prey densities but larvae fed with 0.1 rotifer/ml showed lower ingestion rates. The specific oxygen uptake increased from hatching up to 35-40 micro g dry weight; above this size the specific oxygen consumption remained almost constant. Survival at the end of the experimental period was closely related to the percentage of larvae able to start feeding at day 6. In larvae fed with 0.1 rotifer/ml, the energy ingested during the first days of feeding roughly met maintenance requirements. Therefore, the survival of larvae able to start feeding is not guaranteed at such low prey density.

(Instituto de Ciencias Marinas de Andalucia (CSIC) Apartado Oficial, 11510 Puerto Real, Cadiz, Spain)

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