1. Complete Larval Development of the Fresh Water PrawnMacrobrachium vollenhoveniiin Cameroon
- Author
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Eric Mialhe, Jonas K. Syapze, Ndelle Makoge, Isabelle S. Motto, Guillaume L. P. Gaudin, Jules Romain Ngueguim, BO Oben, Janet H. Brown, Judith G. Makombu, and Pius M. Oben
- Subjects
Larva ,Veterinary medicine ,Macrobrachium ,Ecology ,biology ,Hatching ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Hatchery ,Fishery ,Aquaculture ,Prawn ,Metamorphosis ,business ,Palaemonidae ,media_common - Abstract
The African River prawn Macrobrachium vollenhovenii is the largest of the local Palaemonidae prawns along the Cameroonian coast and an important target species for fisheries and aquaculture. A preliminary study on larviculture of this species was carried out at the IRAD-AQUASOL hatchery in Kribi, Cameroon. Berried females M. vollenhovenii were obtained from the Lobe and Lokoundje Rivers in the Southern Region, typical Lower Guinea rainforest streams. The larval rearing system consisted of a single recirculation system of four 65 L cylindrical plastic containers connected to a submerged biological filter container (65 L). Experiments were conducted three times in the same condition, with two batches of larvae reared separately in duplicate per experiment, at a density of 40/L, temperature 26°C, and salinity 16%. Larvae were fed from 1 day after hatching until metamorphosis to postlarvae (PL) with newly hatched Artemia nauplii, three times daily at the rate of 5 nauplii per mL water. The number of newly hat...
- Published
- 2014
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