The effects of temperature, Artemia enrichment, stocking density and light on the growth of juvenile seahorses, Hippocampus whitei (Bleeker, 1855), from Australia


J.M. Wong, J.A.H. Benzie-2003

Aquaculture, 228(1-4): 107-121
Abstract:

The effects of environmental parameters (temperature, feed, stocking density and light levels) on juvenile growth of White's seahorse, Hippocampus whitei, were examined over 107 days. Growth rates in animals stocked at about 3 months old increased with increasing temperature from 0.14 mm day-1 at 17 °C to 0.26 mm day-1 at 26 °C. Several body condition indices fell with increasing temperature, possibly as a result of increased metabolic rates at higher temperatures. The hepatosomatic index (HSI) fell from 4.44 at 17 °C to 2.67 at 26 °C. The gonadosomatic index (GSI) peaked at 20 °C, indicating that the optimal temperature for reproduction was 20 °C. The seahorses became mature at 6–7 months old. The use of Artemia enriched with DC Selco® improved growth rates over non-enriched Artemia, but did not affect the condition indices. There were no major effects of stocking densities (range 0.5–1 seahorse l-1) and light levels (range 24–136 µE m-2 s-1) on growth over the limited range tested, but there was an indication that reproduction might be inhibited at stocking densities greater than 1 seahorse l-1.

(Centre for Marine and Coastal Studies, University of New South Wales, Kensington, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia, e-mail of J.A.H. Benzie: j.benzie@unsw.edu.au)

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