EFFECT OF ANTIBIOTIC TREATMENT DURING LARVAL
DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHILEAN SCALLOP ARGOPECTEN PURPURATUS
I. Uriate, A. Farias, J.C. Castilla-2001
Aquacultural Engineering, 25(3): 139-147
Abstract :
The requirement for antibiotic use in a culture
depends principally on the quality of water available and on the use of
strict husbandry of the materials closely related with the culture. The
purpose of the present study was to determine the dose of chloramphenicol
resulting in better survival and growth rates of Chilean scallops between
the early larvae and pediveliger stages cultured in closed systems with
manual dosing of food two times per day. Two experiments with antibiotic
application during larval development of the Chilean scallop (Argopecten
purpuratus) were conducted. The experiments were carried out at the
early larval stage (86 µm) and at the eyed stage (213 µm). The antibiotic
concentration ranged between 0 and 8 mg/l chloramphenicol (CHL) per day. The
survival and growth rates of the larvae were monitored for 10 days at each
stage. In the experiment with eyed larvae, larval settlement and percent
metamorphosis were measured. Use of an antibiotic on the early larvae
resulted in significantly better growth and survival. Growth rates were 2.3±0.3
and 2.6±0.2% per day when using 2 and 8 mg/l CHL per day, respectively,
compared with 1.3%±0.2 per day for the larvae without antibiotic. Survival
was also better with antibiotic treatment reaching 50% compared with 35%
without antibiotic. The metamorphosis was highest using of 8 mg/l CHL/day,
compared with treatment without antibiotic. Between 75 and 79% of the
metamorphosed larvae were found settled on the nets in the treatments using
2 and 8 mg/l, while only 55.5% were settled in the nets in the treatment
without antibiotic. The results of the experiments indicate that
concentrations of 2 and 8 mg/l CHL demonstrated effective control of larval
contamination. Moreover, the condition of the postlarvae was improved by the
addition of 8 mg/l CHL from eyed larvae to postlarvae.
(Instituto
de Acuicultura, Facultad de Pesquerías y Oceanografía, Universidad Austral
de Chile, Casilla 1327, Puerto Montt, Chile, e-mail : uriarte@uach.cl)