1. Effects of two culturing techniques on the growth, survival and larval quality of Dentex dentex Linnaeus, 1758.
- Author
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Giménez, Gemma and Estévez, Alicia
- Subjects
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FISH farming , *DENTEX , *HYDRODYNAMICS , *ABNORMALITIES in animals , *AQUACULTURE , *FISH larvae , *FISH growth , *SPINE - Abstract
Common dentex larvae were reared using two culturing techniques, mesocosms and intensive rearing, to determine the principal culture parameters involved in the differences observed in growth, skeletal deformations and survival between the two rearing techniques. In growth, only dry weight of larvae of 40 days post-hatching (dph) from mesocosms was significantly higher than larvae from intensive rearing. Significant differences were observed in survival at 40 dph (6.58% in mesocosms and 1.58% in intensive rearing) and in the incidence of skeletal deformations, both for percentage of deformed larvae and for some deformation types such as those related to vertebral column and to the caudal complex. Initial larval density and initial prey density and quality are the factors suspected to affect growth and survival performance, while skeletal deformities might also be affected by tank hydrodynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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