Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2425627 Aquaculture 2007 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

The effects of green water and light intensity on establishment of exogenous feeding, survival, growth, and lipid and fatty acid composition were investigated for larvae of Atlantic cod in two replicate experiments. In each experiment, six tanks received “low” irradiance (12–20 μW cm− 2) and another six tanks “high” irradiance (240–283 μW cm− 2). In three of the tanks within each light treatment, the alga Isochrysis galbana was added to make green water, and the other three tanks had clear water. Cod larvae were stocked into the tanks at day 3 post-hatch, and fed the rotifer B. plicatilis. Larval survival and gut filling at initiation of exogenous feeding were significantly improved by use of green water, feeding incidence was not significantly affected by any of the treatments, although low light conditions gave a marginal increase in feeding incidence. Growth was not affected by any of the treatments, but a tendency to density-dependent growth was observed within green vs. clear water, yielding some improvement in growth with use of algae. However, a significant signal from the algal treatment was detected in the fatty acid composition of the phospholipids and in the relative amount of triacylglycerols in the larval lipids of cod. Thus, the data demonstrate a nutritional vector of algae in larval cod rearing, and the possibly benefit of this on survival. Lack of effects of light intensity contradicts previous studies on larval cod, but point out possible genetic adaptations in this species to variable environmental conditions throughout its distribution area.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Aquatic Science
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