1. Cultivation of Pen Shells: An Example with Atrina maura in Northwestern Mexico.
- Author
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Leal-Soto, S., Barraza-Guardado, R., Castro-Longoria, R., Chávez-Villalba, J., and Hoyos-Cháirez, F.
- Subjects
AQUACULTURE ,AGRICULTURE ,FISHES ,SPAWNING - Abstract
Pen shells are economically important and most are threatened by overexploitation and habitat degradation. Cultivation represents an alternative for preserving the resource and increasing the production. Atrina maura was cultivated in a suspension system which was followed by a bottom phase. Samples of pen shells and tissues were collected monthly to measure absolute growth, shell height increase, and an adductor muscle index. After the trials, adults shell height was 195 ± 10 mm, total weight was 223 ± 28 g, and mean shell height increase was 0.81 cm/mo. Protective devices were vital to avoid predation by crabs and fish; survival was 90% in the suspension phase and 70% in the bottom phase. Variations in the muscle index were apparently related to reproduction, suggesting activity (partial spawning) from August 2008 to April 2009 in juveniles and a major spawning in adults during August 2009. Adductor muscles reached a mean of 21 g after 20 mo of cultivation, but muscle weights decreased significantly after reproduction (August to November 2009). Results indicated that A. maura is suitable for aquaculture and the cultivation system adopted here should be tested in pilot-scale ventures. This system may work with other species of pen shells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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