Studies related to the artificial spawning and culture of the Abalone, Haliotis midae linne, 1785

Bibliography: leaves 122-135. === The successful aquaculture of the abalone Haliotis midae requires a multi-disciplinary approach. Experiments were designed to provide insight into various aspects of abalone biology and seawater system design. A comparative evaluation of a closed and open seawater s...

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Main Author: Henry, Neil Richard
Other Authors: Brown, Alec C
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14354
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-143542020-10-06T05:10:58Z Studies related to the artificial spawning and culture of the Abalone, Haliotis midae linne, 1785 Henry, Neil Richard Brown, Alec C Branch, George M Zoology Bibliography: leaves 122-135. The successful aquaculture of the abalone Haliotis midae requires a multi-disciplinary approach. Experiments were designed to provide insight into various aspects of abalone biology and seawater system design. A comparative evaluation of a closed and open seawater system for an H. midae hatchery was performed. Monthly seawater temperatures and nitrite levels were higher in the closed system. The salinity of the closed system seawater varied more than that of the open system. The pH of seawater in the closed system varied between 7.7 and 8.2. This was lower than the 7.9 to 8.35 pH range of the open system seawater. An open system is thus clearly preferable to a closed system. Haliotis midae reproductive condition can be assessed visually by examining the shape and colour of the broodstock gonads. Spawning experiments showed that abalone should be starved for at least 24 hours prior to spawning induction. Haliotis midae can be induced to spawn by treatment with hydrogen peroxide when exposed to seawater at a pH of between 9.0 and 9.9 (males and females) Spawning can reliably be induced by using final hydrogen peroxide concentrations in the range of 7 to 25 mM for male and female H. midae. Gravid broodstock should be exposed to hydrogen peroxide for 100 to 300 minutes during spawning induction. There was no significant impact observed for prior conditioning of the brood-stock to the spawning tanks, lunar phase and timing of spawning induction relative to sunset. Haliotis midae larval toxicity to chlorine, copper and ammonia was investigated. The LT50 to a chlorine concentration of 0.06 mg/l was 170 minutes. For copper the LT50 of larvae exposed to 0.12 mg/l was 53 minutes. The LT50 of ammonia at 5 mg/l was 600 minutes. A brief synopsis of the major findings is presented in the last chapter. Some discussion on the future prospects of the abalone industry is also provided. 2015-10-25T17:11:02Z 2015-10-25T17:11:02Z 1996 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14354 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Biological Sciences
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Zoology
spellingShingle Zoology
Henry, Neil Richard
Studies related to the artificial spawning and culture of the Abalone, Haliotis midae linne, 1785
description Bibliography: leaves 122-135. === The successful aquaculture of the abalone Haliotis midae requires a multi-disciplinary approach. Experiments were designed to provide insight into various aspects of abalone biology and seawater system design. A comparative evaluation of a closed and open seawater system for an H. midae hatchery was performed. Monthly seawater temperatures and nitrite levels were higher in the closed system. The salinity of the closed system seawater varied more than that of the open system. The pH of seawater in the closed system varied between 7.7 and 8.2. This was lower than the 7.9 to 8.35 pH range of the open system seawater. An open system is thus clearly preferable to a closed system. Haliotis midae reproductive condition can be assessed visually by examining the shape and colour of the broodstock gonads. Spawning experiments showed that abalone should be starved for at least 24 hours prior to spawning induction. Haliotis midae can be induced to spawn by treatment with hydrogen peroxide when exposed to seawater at a pH of between 9.0 and 9.9 (males and females) Spawning can reliably be induced by using final hydrogen peroxide concentrations in the range of 7 to 25 mM for male and female H. midae. Gravid broodstock should be exposed to hydrogen peroxide for 100 to 300 minutes during spawning induction. There was no significant impact observed for prior conditioning of the brood-stock to the spawning tanks, lunar phase and timing of spawning induction relative to sunset. Haliotis midae larval toxicity to chlorine, copper and ammonia was investigated. The LT50 to a chlorine concentration of 0.06 mg/l was 170 minutes. For copper the LT50 of larvae exposed to 0.12 mg/l was 53 minutes. The LT50 of ammonia at 5 mg/l was 600 minutes. A brief synopsis of the major findings is presented in the last chapter. Some discussion on the future prospects of the abalone industry is also provided.
author2 Brown, Alec C
author_facet Brown, Alec C
Henry, Neil Richard
author Henry, Neil Richard
author_sort Henry, Neil Richard
title Studies related to the artificial spawning and culture of the Abalone, Haliotis midae linne, 1785
title_short Studies related to the artificial spawning and culture of the Abalone, Haliotis midae linne, 1785
title_full Studies related to the artificial spawning and culture of the Abalone, Haliotis midae linne, 1785
title_fullStr Studies related to the artificial spawning and culture of the Abalone, Haliotis midae linne, 1785
title_full_unstemmed Studies related to the artificial spawning and culture of the Abalone, Haliotis midae linne, 1785
title_sort studies related to the artificial spawning and culture of the abalone, haliotis midae linne, 1785
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14354
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