4.5 Article

Larviculture of the painted river prawn Macrobrachium carcinus in different culture systems

Journal

AQUACULTURAL ENGINEERING
Volume 92, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquaeng.2020.102139

Keywords

Freshwater prawn; Biofilter; Biofloc; Greenwater; Clearwater; Larval survival

Funding

  1. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development - CNPq [480717/2010-9]
  2. Foundation of Support towards Science and Technology of the State of Pernambuco - FACEPE [APQ-0893-5.06/10]
  3. Aquaculture Station of the Federal Rural University of Pernambuco (DEPAq/UFRPE)
  4. Limnology and Sustainable Mariculture Laboratories of the Fisheries and Aquaculture Department of UFRPE

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This study evaluated four different hatchery systems for Macrobrachium carcinus larviculture, with the Greenwater system showing higher survival rates in the early stages and the Biofloc system demonstrating higher production in the later stages.
The objective of this study was to evaluate different hatchery systems used for the larviculture of the Macrobrachium carcinus based on survival, larval development and production of post-larvae. The experimental culture was carried out in three phases designated as Phase I (Zoea VI to VIII - Z(VI - VIII)), Phase II (Zoea VIII to X - Z(VIII- X)), and Phase III (Zoea X to PL - Z(X - PL)), with densities of 30, 27.5 and 25 larvae / L, respectively. The M. carcinus larvae (Z(VI)) were reared in four culture systems, two being open (Greenwater - GW and Clearwater - CW) and two being closed (Biofloc - BFT and Bio-filter - RAS), distributed in twelve 10 L plastic containers, filled with 20 ppt brackish water, equipped with constant aeration, and water circulated by air lift and heated with thermostat (similar to 30 degrees C). The GW treatment was maintained with Chlorophyceae algae in the density of 3-5 x 10(5) cells/mL. In the CW, the water was previously filtered through a 5 mu m mesh screen, sterilized with 10 ppm active chlorine and, dechlorinated with vitamin C and subjected to aeration for 24 h. The BFT received water rich in bioflocs that was matured prior to the experiment and used molasses as a source of organic carbon. In the RAS, the culture water circulated through an external Dry-Wet biological filter. The feeding was carried out ad libitum four times daily, alternating a wet diet formula with a commercial diet, which was supplemented with newly hatched Artemia nauplii at a rate of 40-50 per larvae/day. Temperature, dissolved oxygen and pH were monitored daily and the salinity two times per week. Total ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, orthophosphate, alkalinity, total suspended solids, chlorophyll-a, COD and BOD were also analyzed. The best water quality (P < 0.05) was obtained in the RAS, with 0.49 (+/- 0.38), 0.23 (+/- 0.22), and 9.0 (+/- 1.5) mg/L of TAN, NO2-N and NO3-N, respectively. In the GW, the nitrogen species showed high fluctuations and higher concentrations at 2.32 (+/- 1.68), 3.53 (+/- 3.53) and 18.2 (+/- 12.9) mg / L of TAN, NO2-N and NO3-N, respectively. Considering the three phases (Z(VI - PL)), the overall survival was 0.03, 1.97, 2.23 and 17.32 % for the BFT, CW, GW and RAS, respectively. When considering the phases separately, the survival in Phase I (Z(VI - VIII)) was highest in the GW system at 58.7 % while the RAS was the highest in Phases II (Z(VIII - X)) and III (Z(X - PL)) at 70.6 % and 60.3 %, respectively. The BFT showed 8.4 (+/- 3.5) PL/ L, which was higher (P < 0.05) than that obtained in the RAS (2.8 +/- 1.2 PL/L) and the GW (1.3 +/- 1.1 PL/L) and similar to that obtained in the CW (5.6 +/- 2.0 PL/L). Thus, the larviculture for the M. carcinus may be optimized by adopting a multiphase management strategy, which the intermediate larval stages (Z(VI - IX)) are reared in the GW system and the final stages (Z(X - PL)) are reared in the BFT system.

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