Role of microalgae in conditioning water in penaeid larval culture

Microalgae play an important role in conditioning water quality for penaeid larval culture. Recently it has been demonstrated that a modification of the green water larval culture system (Ling, 1969) for Macrobrachium allows the production of post larvae without any water change, despite extensive use of artificial feeds (Ang and Cheah, 1986). Increase of toxic metabolites such as ammonia and nitride are also common in penaeid larval culture, especially where excessive amounts of artifial feeds are employed. Present work examines the use of six marine microalgae at four cell concentrations as a "biological filter" system, to control and detoxify levels of ammonia and nitrite in P. monodon larval culture water whilst using artificial diet. Preliminary results indicate that amongst the six algal species tested, C. japonica at 1000 cell μlˉ¹ was most effective in reducing accumulated toxic metabolites from an unchanged culture water environment.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Amjad, S., Jones, D.A.
Format: article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1994
Subjects:Biology, Chemistry, microalgae, ammonia, nitrite, shrimp larval feed trial,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/31948
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-aquadocs-1834-31948
record_format koha
spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-319482021-06-28T02:48:00Z Role of microalgae in conditioning water in penaeid larval culture Amjad, S. Jones, D.A. Biology Chemistry microalgae ammonia nitrite shrimp larval feed trial Microalgae play an important role in conditioning water quality for penaeid larval culture. Recently it has been demonstrated that a modification of the green water larval culture system (Ling, 1969) for Macrobrachium allows the production of post larvae without any water change, despite extensive use of artificial feeds (Ang and Cheah, 1986). Increase of toxic metabolites such as ammonia and nitride are also common in penaeid larval culture, especially where excessive amounts of artifial feeds are employed. Present work examines the use of six marine microalgae at four cell concentrations as a "biological filter" system, to control and detoxify levels of ammonia and nitrite in P. monodon larval culture water whilst using artificial diet. Preliminary results indicate that amongst the six algal species tested, C. japonica at 1000 cell μlˉ¹ was most effective in reducing accumulated toxic metabolites from an unchanged culture water environment. 2021-06-24T17:19:31Z 2021-06-24T17:19:31Z 1994 article 1019-8415 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/31948 en application/pdf application/pdf 41-51 http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/16123 12051 2015-02-04 13:38:56 16123 University of Karachi. Marine Reference Collection and Resource Centre
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Biology
Chemistry
microalgae
ammonia
nitrite
shrimp larval feed trial
Biology
Chemistry
microalgae
ammonia
nitrite
shrimp larval feed trial
spellingShingle Biology
Chemistry
microalgae
ammonia
nitrite
shrimp larval feed trial
Biology
Chemistry
microalgae
ammonia
nitrite
shrimp larval feed trial
Amjad, S.
Jones, D.A.
Role of microalgae in conditioning water in penaeid larval culture
description Microalgae play an important role in conditioning water quality for penaeid larval culture. Recently it has been demonstrated that a modification of the green water larval culture system (Ling, 1969) for Macrobrachium allows the production of post larvae without any water change, despite extensive use of artificial feeds (Ang and Cheah, 1986). Increase of toxic metabolites such as ammonia and nitride are also common in penaeid larval culture, especially where excessive amounts of artifial feeds are employed. Present work examines the use of six marine microalgae at four cell concentrations as a "biological filter" system, to control and detoxify levels of ammonia and nitrite in P. monodon larval culture water whilst using artificial diet. Preliminary results indicate that amongst the six algal species tested, C. japonica at 1000 cell μlˉ¹ was most effective in reducing accumulated toxic metabolites from an unchanged culture water environment.
format article
topic_facet Biology
Chemistry
microalgae
ammonia
nitrite
shrimp larval feed trial
author Amjad, S.
Jones, D.A.
author_facet Amjad, S.
Jones, D.A.
author_sort Amjad, S.
title Role of microalgae in conditioning water in penaeid larval culture
title_short Role of microalgae in conditioning water in penaeid larval culture
title_full Role of microalgae in conditioning water in penaeid larval culture
title_fullStr Role of microalgae in conditioning water in penaeid larval culture
title_full_unstemmed Role of microalgae in conditioning water in penaeid larval culture
title_sort role of microalgae in conditioning water in penaeid larval culture
publishDate 1994
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/31948
work_keys_str_mv AT amjads roleofmicroalgaeinconditioningwaterinpenaeidlarvalculture
AT jonesda roleofmicroalgaeinconditioningwaterinpenaeidlarvalculture
_version_ 1756078894045200384