A survey on the hyperbenthic communities was carried out in the coastal waters of Sishili Bay in the Yellow Sea in July 2009,to investigate the impact of putative anthropogenic activities related to the presence of a ...A survey on the hyperbenthic communities was carried out in the coastal waters of Sishili Bay in the Yellow Sea in July 2009,to investigate the impact of putative anthropogenic activities related to the presence of a sewage outfall,a harbor and an aquaculture site on the benthic ecosystem.An Agassiz net trawl was used to collect hyperbenthos at 10 sampling stations.Species,diversity,abundance,and biomass were analyzed against water sample data and historical data obtained from records from nearby Yantai City.Fifty-two species were identified in the region,of which Crustacea were the most abundant taxon,followed by Echinodermata.Dominant species included five crustaceans,two echinoderms,one mollusk and one fish species.The results of a BIOENV analysis show that the concentrations of NO3-N and Chl-a were slightly positively correlated with hyperbenthic community structure,while other factors were negatively correlated,including sediment grain size and the percentage of TN and TOC in sediment.Abundance- Biomass Comparison(ABC method) curves indicate that the hyperbenthos in Sishili Bay had been disturbed by putative sources of human activities.Eight out of 10 stations were classified as "moderately perturbed" to "perturbed".展开更多
Mesocosm hatcheries using semi-intensive culture methodologies are characterized by large tanks (40 m3) for fish larvae production at low densities (2-8 larvae/L), with live prey production within the tank supplem...Mesocosm hatcheries using semi-intensive culture methodologies are characterized by large tanks (40 m3) for fish larvae production at low densities (2-8 larvae/L), with live prey production within the tank supplemented by exogenous sources of feed. Due to the high biological quality of larvae produced and low level of technological input, these methodologies are regarded as an interesting option to meet the increasing fry demand from the aquaculture industry. This study aimed to describe the experience at Centro de Maricultura da Calheta, Madeira Island, Portugal, with the establishment of a mesocosm hatchery for the production of marine fish larvae. Production trials were initiated with gilthead seabream Sparus aurata. This larval species presented faster growth in total body length (TL) per day (TL = 3.7516e~ ~293day, R2 = 0.9404), higher survival rate (SR = 31.9%) and comparable swimbladder inflation rates (SB = 90%) to those of larvae reared with intensive methodologies. High larval performance was obtained with two candidate species for aquaculture: the red porgy Pagruspagrus (TL = 3.212e~~39day, R2 = 0.995; SR = 15.3%; SB = 95.7%) and the white seabream Diplodus sargus (TL = 3.6355e~~413day, R2= 0.9824; SR = 25%; SB --- 100%). Testing ofa 110 m3 mesocosm rearing tank with white seabream larvae revealed limitations associated to larger tanks namely, the amount and quality of live feed required daily. First trials with striped jack (Pseudocararoc dentex) larvae resulted in low larval survival (0.04%), but the use of a white tank avoided culture management constraints related to positive phototropism. The present results suggest that a mesocosm using semi-intensive methodologies may contribute to species diversification and consequently, to the sustainable development of aquaculture.展开更多
基金Supported by the Knowledge Innovation Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences(No.KZCX2-YW-Q07-04)the National Natural Science Foundation of China(No.NSFC41061130543)the Science and Technology Planning Project of Shandong Province(No.2011GGF01003)
文摘A survey on the hyperbenthic communities was carried out in the coastal waters of Sishili Bay in the Yellow Sea in July 2009,to investigate the impact of putative anthropogenic activities related to the presence of a sewage outfall,a harbor and an aquaculture site on the benthic ecosystem.An Agassiz net trawl was used to collect hyperbenthos at 10 sampling stations.Species,diversity,abundance,and biomass were analyzed against water sample data and historical data obtained from records from nearby Yantai City.Fifty-two species were identified in the region,of which Crustacea were the most abundant taxon,followed by Echinodermata.Dominant species included five crustaceans,two echinoderms,one mollusk and one fish species.The results of a BIOENV analysis show that the concentrations of NO3-N and Chl-a were slightly positively correlated with hyperbenthic community structure,while other factors were negatively correlated,including sediment grain size and the percentage of TN and TOC in sediment.Abundance- Biomass Comparison(ABC method) curves indicate that the hyperbenthos in Sishili Bay had been disturbed by putative sources of human activities.Eight out of 10 stations were classified as "moderately perturbed" to "perturbed".
文摘Mesocosm hatcheries using semi-intensive culture methodologies are characterized by large tanks (40 m3) for fish larvae production at low densities (2-8 larvae/L), with live prey production within the tank supplemented by exogenous sources of feed. Due to the high biological quality of larvae produced and low level of technological input, these methodologies are regarded as an interesting option to meet the increasing fry demand from the aquaculture industry. This study aimed to describe the experience at Centro de Maricultura da Calheta, Madeira Island, Portugal, with the establishment of a mesocosm hatchery for the production of marine fish larvae. Production trials were initiated with gilthead seabream Sparus aurata. This larval species presented faster growth in total body length (TL) per day (TL = 3.7516e~ ~293day, R2 = 0.9404), higher survival rate (SR = 31.9%) and comparable swimbladder inflation rates (SB = 90%) to those of larvae reared with intensive methodologies. High larval performance was obtained with two candidate species for aquaculture: the red porgy Pagruspagrus (TL = 3.212e~~39day, R2 = 0.995; SR = 15.3%; SB = 95.7%) and the white seabream Diplodus sargus (TL = 3.6355e~~413day, R2= 0.9824; SR = 25%; SB --- 100%). Testing ofa 110 m3 mesocosm rearing tank with white seabream larvae revealed limitations associated to larger tanks namely, the amount and quality of live feed required daily. First trials with striped jack (Pseudocararoc dentex) larvae resulted in low larval survival (0.04%), but the use of a white tank avoided culture management constraints related to positive phototropism. The present results suggest that a mesocosm using semi-intensive methodologies may contribute to species diversification and consequently, to the sustainable development of aquaculture.