SEAFDECINSTITUTIONAL REPOSITORY
    • English
    • ไทย
    • 日本語
    • Bahasa Indonesia
    • Bahasa Melayu
    • Burmese
    • Filipino
    • Khmer
    • Lao
    • Tiếng Việt
  • Filipino 
    • English
    • ไทย
    • 日本語
    • Bahasa Indonesia
    • Bahasa Melayu
    • Burmese
    • Filipino
    • Khmer
    • Lao
    • Tiếng Việt
  • Mag log in
Tingnan ang Item 
  •   DSpace Home
  • 03 SEAFDEC External Publications
  • Journal Articles, Conference Papers and Book Chapters by SEAFDEC Staff
  • Conference Proceedings
  • AQD Conference Proceedings
  • Tingnan ang Item
  •   DSpace Home
  • 03 SEAFDEC External Publications
  • Journal Articles, Conference Papers and Book Chapters by SEAFDEC Staff
  • Conference Proceedings
  • AQD Conference Proceedings
  • Tingnan ang Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Ability of sandfish (Holothuria scabra) to utilise organic matter in black tiger shrimp ponds

Thumbnail
Tingnan/Open
Request this document
Petsa
2012
May-akda
Watanabe, Satoshi
Kodama, Masashi
Zarate, Jacques M.
Lebata-Ramos, Maria J. H.
Nievales, Marie Frances J.
Page views
165
Metadata
Ipakita ang buong tala ng item

Share 
 
Abstract
Due to frequent viral disease outbreaks, a large proportion of shrimp aquaculture in South-East Asian countries has switched from black tiger shrimp (Penaeus monodon) to P. vannamei, an exotic species originally imported from Latin America. One of the causes of disease outbreaks is thought to be poor water and sediment conditions in the shrimp ponds, which may aggravate disease symptoms. To obtain basic information for co-culture methods of black tiger shrimp and sandfish (Holothuria scabra) for possible mitigation of shrimp-pond eutrophication and prevention of disease outbreaks, basic laboratory experiments were conducted at the Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center—Aquaculture Department in Iloilo, the Philippines. A feeding trial of juvenile sandfish showed that they do not grow well with fresh shrimp feed on hard substrate. Another trial indicated that sand substrate enhances the growth of juvenile sandfish fed with shrimp feed. A feeding trial using shrimp tank detritus, shrimp faeces and Navicula ramosissima (a benthic diatom) as food sources showed that sandfish grew fastest with the faeces, followed by detritus and N. ramosissima. Dissolved oxygen consumption and acid-volatile sulfur levels in the shrimp tank detritus were reduced by sandfish feeding. This suggests that sandfish are capable of growing with organic matter in shrimp ponds, and can bioremediate shrimp-pond sediment.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10862/2208
Suggested Citation
Watanabe, S., Kodama, M., Zarate, J. M., Lebata-Ramos, M. J. H., & Nievales, M. F. J. (2012). Ability of sandfish (Holothuria scabra) to utilise organic matter in black tiger shrimp ponds. In C. A. Hair, T. D. Pickering, & D. J. Mills (Eds.), Asia-Pacific tropical sea cucumber aquaculture. Proceedings of an international symposium held in Noumea, New Caledonia, 15-17 February 2011 (ACIAR Proceedings No. 136) (pp. 113-120). Canberra, ACT: Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research.
Paksa
Holothuria scabra; Sea cucumbers
Mga koleksyon
  • AQD Conference Proceedings [300]

© SEAFDEC 2023
Makipag-ugnayan sa amin
 

 

Mag-browse

Lahat ng DSpaceMga Komunidad at KoleksyonAyon sa Petsa ng IsyuMga may-akdaMga pamagatMga paksaAng Koleksyon na itoAyon sa Petsa ng IsyuMga may-akdaMga pamagatMga paksa

Aking Account

Mag log inMagrehistro

Mga istatistika

Tingnan ang Mga Istatistika ng Paggamit
Related Links
SEAFDEC/TD IRSEAFDEC/AQD IRSEAFDEC/MFRDMD IRSEAFDEC/IFRDMD IR

© SEAFDEC 2023
Makipag-ugnayan sa amin