Optimisation of mesh enclosures for nursery rearing of juvenile sea cucumbers.

Mariculture of tropical sea cucumbers is promising, but the nursery rearing of juveniles is a bottleneck for farming and sea ranching. We conducted four medium-scale experiments lasting 3-6 weeks, using thousands of cultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra, to optimise nursery rearing in mesh en...

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Main Authors: Steven W Purcell, Natacha S Agudo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3662713?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-cfff29ab60924b329d9a6fc3964e32aa2020-11-25T01:22:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0185e6410310.1371/journal.pone.0064103Optimisation of mesh enclosures for nursery rearing of juvenile sea cucumbers.Steven W PurcellNatacha S AgudoMariculture of tropical sea cucumbers is promising, but the nursery rearing of juveniles is a bottleneck for farming and sea ranching. We conducted four medium-scale experiments lasting 3-6 weeks, using thousands of cultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra, to optimise nursery rearing in mesh enclosures in earthen seawater ponds and to test rearing in enclosures in the sea. In one experiment, survival in fine-mesh enclosures (1 m(3); 660-µm mesh) related nonlinearly to juvenile size, revealing a threshold body length of 5-8 mm for initial transfer from hatchery tanks. Survival in enclosures within ponds in the other experiments ranged from 78-97%, and differences in growth rates among experiments were explained largely by seasonal differences in seawater temperatures in ponds. Stripped shadecloth units within fine-mesh enclosures increased feeding surfaces and improved growth rates by >15%. On the other hand, shading over the enclosures may lower growth rates. Following the rearing in fine-mesh enclosures, small juveniles (0.5 to 1 g) were grown to stocking size (3-10 g) in coarse-mesh enclosures of 1-mm mesh. Sand or mud added to coarse-mesh enclosures did not significantly improve growth compared to controls without sediment. Survival of sandfish juveniles in coarse-mesh enclosures set on the benthos within seagrass beds differed between two sheltered bays and growth was slow compared to groups within the same type of enclosures in an earthen pond. Our findings should lead to significant improvement in the cost-effectiveness of rearing sandfish juveniles to a stocking size compared to established methods and highlight the need for further research into nursery systems in the sea.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3662713?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Steven W Purcell
Natacha S Agudo
spellingShingle Steven W Purcell
Natacha S Agudo
Optimisation of mesh enclosures for nursery rearing of juvenile sea cucumbers.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Steven W Purcell
Natacha S Agudo
author_sort Steven W Purcell
title Optimisation of mesh enclosures for nursery rearing of juvenile sea cucumbers.
title_short Optimisation of mesh enclosures for nursery rearing of juvenile sea cucumbers.
title_full Optimisation of mesh enclosures for nursery rearing of juvenile sea cucumbers.
title_fullStr Optimisation of mesh enclosures for nursery rearing of juvenile sea cucumbers.
title_full_unstemmed Optimisation of mesh enclosures for nursery rearing of juvenile sea cucumbers.
title_sort optimisation of mesh enclosures for nursery rearing of juvenile sea cucumbers.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Mariculture of tropical sea cucumbers is promising, but the nursery rearing of juveniles is a bottleneck for farming and sea ranching. We conducted four medium-scale experiments lasting 3-6 weeks, using thousands of cultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra, to optimise nursery rearing in mesh enclosures in earthen seawater ponds and to test rearing in enclosures in the sea. In one experiment, survival in fine-mesh enclosures (1 m(3); 660-µm mesh) related nonlinearly to juvenile size, revealing a threshold body length of 5-8 mm for initial transfer from hatchery tanks. Survival in enclosures within ponds in the other experiments ranged from 78-97%, and differences in growth rates among experiments were explained largely by seasonal differences in seawater temperatures in ponds. Stripped shadecloth units within fine-mesh enclosures increased feeding surfaces and improved growth rates by >15%. On the other hand, shading over the enclosures may lower growth rates. Following the rearing in fine-mesh enclosures, small juveniles (0.5 to 1 g) were grown to stocking size (3-10 g) in coarse-mesh enclosures of 1-mm mesh. Sand or mud added to coarse-mesh enclosures did not significantly improve growth compared to controls without sediment. Survival of sandfish juveniles in coarse-mesh enclosures set on the benthos within seagrass beds differed between two sheltered bays and growth was slow compared to groups within the same type of enclosures in an earthen pond. Our findings should lead to significant improvement in the cost-effectiveness of rearing sandfish juveniles to a stocking size compared to established methods and highlight the need for further research into nursery systems in the sea.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3662713?pdf=render
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