1. Survival of Early Stripped Eggs of the Noble Crayfish, Astacus astacu, and Effects of Saline Solution During Artificial Incubation
- Author
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Christina Hörterer, Melanie Schiffer, Kai Lorkowski, Uli Seemann, Matthew J. Slater, and Bela H. Buck
- Subjects
Astacus ,biology ,Hatching ,Ecology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,biology.organism_classification ,Crayfish ,Animal science ,Aquaculture ,medicine ,Juvenile ,14. Life underwater ,business ,Saline ,Incubation - Abstract
There is growing interest in using recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS) to produce juvenile noble crayfish, Astacus astacus (Linnaeus), a valuable and once plentiful food species in Europe, now a highly endangered species. The survival rates of early stripped eggs of A. astacus were compared across anti-fungal treatments in an artificial RAS incubation system based on a saline bath of approx. 20 – 22 mS cm -1 or 15 – 16 PSU over two different durations. Time from fertilisation to hatching was 82 days or 1191 degreedays. Low survival rates (live successfully hatched juveniles at end of experimental period) between 11.0 ± 9.5% and 26.6 ± 3.7% were obtained. Survival was significantly affected by the duration of egg bath within the saline solution with twice as high survival rates when eggs were saline-bathed once every two days for five minutes in comparison to eggs without treatment. Fungal rates were significantly affected by treating the eggs with a saline solution with infection rates decreasing from 3.7 ± 1.0% to 0.8 ± 0.5% in the ten minute saline bath treatment. Appropriately applied saline bathing can markedly improve survival of early-stripped noble crayfish eggs. However, further research is required to determine whether viable levels of hatching success can be obtained using early stripping and saline treatment.
- Published
- 2014