4.5 Article

Responses of scallop biodeposits to bioturbation by a deposit-feeder Apostichopus japonicus (Echinodermata: Holothuroidea): does the holothurian density matter?

Journal

AQUACULTURE RESEARCH
Volume 47, Issue 2, Pages 512-523

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/are.12511

Keywords

deposit-feeding holothurian; scallop biodeposits; bioturbation; density-dependent effect; co-culture

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30871932]
  2. National Marine Public Welfare Research Project [201305043/201105006]

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The deposit-feeding holothurians can reduce the negative impact of bivalve farming by feeding and reworking bivalve wastes (biodeposits) in the context of co-culture. To test effects of the bioturbation by holothurians of different densities on bivalve wastes, a stocking density regime of the sea cucumber Apostichopus japonicus (35.4 +/- 1.2g, mean +/- SE) was set at 0.0, 6.6, 13.2indm(-2), and responses of the biotic parameters including chlorophyll a concentration (Chl. a), bacterial biomass and the abiotic ones as oxidation-reduction potential (ORP), organic matter (OM), organic carbon (OC), total nitrogen (TN) and organic phosphorus (OP) in biodeposits discharged by Japanese scallop Patinopecten yessoensis were investigated. Results showed that A. japonicus grew in a density-dependent manner, and the density-dependent effect on both biotic and abiotic parameters in biodeposits were also observed. Apostichopus japonicus stimulated a transfer process from reduction to weak reduction state of the biodeposits with a trend of higher density holothurians stimulating the process more. Furthermore, A. japonicus significantly controlled the bacterial abundance and Chl. a, as well as reducing the contents of OM, OC, TN and OP in the biodeposits. Yet, the response of abiotic parameters delayed rather than that of biotic parameters, underling the biotic parameters could be more sensitive to bioturbation than the abiotic ones. Our study suggests that the bioturbation of A. japonicus plays an important role in retarding organic waste accumulation and cleansing nutrients in bivalve farming wastes under co-culture condition and the bioremediation capacity may be closely dependent on its stocking density in practice.

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