Application of Marine Foodfish Techniques in
Marine Ornamental Aquaculture: Reproduction and Larval First Feeding
A.C. Ostrowski, Ch.W. Laidley-2001
Aquarium Sciences and Conservation, 3(1/3): 191-204
Abstract:
The long-term sustainability of the marine ornamental industry is being
threatened by environmental pressures that are severely degrading the health
of coral reef ecosystems. There is now a compelling need to practice
resource conservation through the development of ‘reef friendly‘
aquaculture technologies as an alternative to wild collection practices and
to restore degraded wild populations. The commercial culture of marine
ornamental finfish is very much in its infancy, but advances can be made
more rapidly using insights from years of research and development with
marine foodfish species. Many of the bottlenecks and constraints to
developing marine ornamental fish culture are those now being addressed with
the more challenging species of foodfish being attempted. The two key
bottlenecks that currently limit expansion of the marine ornamental industry
are the control of captive maturation and spawning and the identification of
appropriate first-feed items for marine ornamental fish larvae. This paper
highlights basic principles and recent achievements in marine foodfish
culture that might be applicable to rapid development of controlled
reproduction and propagation techniques for marine ornamental finfish.
(The Oceanic Institute Makapuu Point Waimanalo HI 96795, USA)