4.3 Article

Development of Improved Feeding Methods in the Culture of Yellow Tang, Zebrasoma flavescens

期刊

JOURNAL OF THE WORLD AQUACULTURE SOCIETY
卷 49, 期 3, 页码 493-503

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jwas.12496

关键词

marine ornamentals; yellow tang; Zebrasoma flavescens

资金

  1. Sea World & Busch Gardens Conservation Fund via Rising Tide Conservation
  2. Oceanic Institute
  3. New Life International, San Francisco Bay Brand (Ocean Nutrition)
  4. Larry's Reef Services
  5. Piscine Energetics

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Yellow tang, Zebrasoma flavescens, are one of the most heavily traded marine aquarium fish species, with nearly 400,000 individuals collected annually from Hawaii's reefs. Despite recent success culturing this species, significant challenges in the rearing processes remain to be overcome before commercialization is feasible. This study compared two feeding regimens, an original diet treatment, which was initially used to successfully culture yellow tang, and a revised diet, which differed in the timing of the introduction of feed items and weaning periods. Both diet regimens consisted of Parvocalanus crassirostris nauplii, enriched Brachionus rotundiformis rotifers, and Artemia nauplii, followed by a transition to dry and frozen feed items. The revised feeding regimen aimed to considerably reduce the amount of copepods and rotifers needed in the rearing process. Eggs were stocked at 40/L into replicate (n=3) 200-L tanks for the feeding regimen trial. A follow-up rearing study, in which eggs were stocked at 19/L in a single 1000-L tank, tested the revised feeding method at pilot scale. Fish reared on the revised feeding regimen were observed to grow faster in body length and body depth after 2wk in culture and transitioned more quickly to juveniles as 41% had completed their transition to juvenile coloration by 70 d after hatch. None of the fish reared under the original feeding regimen attained full juvenile coloration during the study period. Survival was not significantly different between treatments and was 0.13%+/- 0.13 and 0.29%+/- 0.17 in the original and revised feeding regimens, respectively. In the pilot-scale study, growth was comparable to that of both treatments in the 200-L scale trial, but survival was much better at 1.9%. This study successfully shortened the copepod and rotifer feeding periods for yellow tang, while not jeopardizing growth or survival. This outcome enhances the commercialization potential for this and likely other Acanthuridae species.

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