4.6 Article

Successful large-scale hatchery culture of sandfish (Holothuria scabra) using micro-algae concentrates as a larval food source

Journal

AQUACULTURE REPORTS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages 25-30

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aqrep.2017.11.005

Keywords

Sea cucumber; Beche-de-mer; Survival; Growth; Aquaculture

Categories

Funding

  1. National Fisheries Authority (NFA) [FIS/2014/061]

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This paper reports methodology for large-scale hatchery culture of sandfish, Holothuria scabra, in the absence of live, cultured micro-algae. We demonstrate how commercially-available micro-algae concentrates can be incorporated into hatchery protocols as the sole larval food source to completely replace live, cultured microalgae. Micro-algae concentrates supported comparable hatchery production of sandfish to that of live, cultured micro-algae traditionally used in large-scale hatchery culture. The hatchery protocol presented allowed a single technician to achieve production of more than 18,800 juvenile sandfish at 40 days post-fertilisation in a low-resource hatchery in Papua New Guinea. Growth of auricularia larvae fed micro-algae concentrates was represented by the equation length (mu m) = 307.8 x ln(day) + 209.2 (R-2 = 0.93) while survival over the entire 40 day hatchery cycle was described by the equation survival = 2 x day(-1.06) (R-2 = 0.74). These results show that micro-algae concentrates have great potential for simplifying hatchery culture of sea cucumbers by reducing infrastructural and technical resources required for live micro-algae culture. The hatchery methodology described in this study is likely to have applicability to low-resource hatcheries throughout the Indo-Pacific and could support regional expansion of sandfish hatchery production.

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