Determination
of the rates of fertilization, hatching and larval survival in the Japanese
eel, Anguilla japonica, using tissue culture microplates
T.
Unuma, S. Kondo, H. Tanaka, H. Kagawa, K. Nomura, H. Ohta-2004
Aquaculture, 241(1-4): 345-356
Abstract:
A
method was developed for assessing fertility, hatchability and larval
survival in the Japanese eel, Anguilla japonica. Fertilized eggs were
stocked in 24-, 48-, and 96-well plates at one egg to one well and
maintained at 23 °C without removing dead larvae, changing the water or
feeding. Upon hatching, the larvae were often trapped on the surface of the
water where they died (surface death). The remaining larvae then showed
rather stable survival in the three types of plates beyond the yolk-sac
stage, which was completed by day 8 after hatching (DAH). Polyethylene
glycol 6000 (PEG 6000) added to the rearing water at 1 or 10 μg/ml
markedly suppressed surface death without apparent effect on hatchability,
the survival profile or abnormality. These results indicated that the
survival rate can be determined easily by stocking the fertilized eggs
individually in the wells of microplates with water containing PEG 6000 and
by rearing the hatched larvae until the completion of yolk absorption, with
little management. By this method, a series of parameters for evaluating the
egg quality, rates of fertilization, hatching, survival and abnormality were
determined in the artificially maturation-induced Japanese eel: unstable
fertility and frequent abnormal development were revealed to be impediments
to constant production of larvae at first feeding.
(National
Research Institute of Aquaculture, Fisheries Research Agency, Nansei, Mie
516-0193, Japan, e-mail: unuma@fra.affrc.go.jp)