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Effect of starvation on the growth and survival of post-larval abalone (Haliotis iris)
Authors:Rodney D Roberts  Caroline Lapworth  Richard J Barker
Institution:

a Cawthron Institute, Private Bag 2, Nelson, New Zealand

b Marine Science Department, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand

c Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand

Abstract:The starvation tolerance of post-larval abalone (Haliotis iris) was determined by examining post-larval growth and survival after various periods of starvation. Competent larvae (10 days old at 16°C) were induced to attach and metamorphose with 2 μM GABA. Post-larvae were either fed diatoms (Nitzschia longissima) or starved. In Experiment 1, post-larvae were starved immediately after metamorphosis for periods of 1, 2, 4, 8, 15, 20, 25 and 30 days. Starved post-larvae grew relatively well for several days after metamorphosis despite the absence of food (averages of 10.4 and 17.8 μm shell length (SL) per day after 8 days for two batches). Subsequent growth was minimal, averaging 1.7 and 0.7 μm day?1 over 6–7 days for the two batches. There was no clear relationship between period of starvation and growth rate when fed. Mean daily growth rate over 3 weeks when fed ranged from not, vert, similar15–22 μm day?1. However, the duration of starvation did have a significant effect on survival. Survival of post-larvae fed after 1–2 days of starvation was 90–100% after 3 weeks of feeding. Longer starvation periods gave progressively lower survival and post-larvae starved for 30 days all died within a week of being fed. In Experiment 2, post larvae were fed for 3 weeks after metamorphosis, then starved for 0, 3, 7, 14 or 21 days. Growth rates of starved post-larvae averaged only 5–6 μm day?1 in the first week (vs. 30 μm day?1 in controls), and later declined to zero. Growth resumed within a week following return to food, but the 14- and 21-day starvation treatments took 2 weeks to reach growth rates comparable to controls. The no-starvation controls and the 3- and 7-day starvation treatments all had >70% survival over 4 weeks after return to food. Survival in the 14- and 21-day starvation treatments was 15–20%, with almost all mortalities occurring in the first week after return to food. These data suggest that Haliotis iris post-larvae are relatively tolerant of starvation, so abalone farmers have a week or so to remedy food shortages before major post-larval mortality begins.
Keywords:Abalone  Growth  Post-larvae  Starvation  Survival  Yolk reserves
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