Spatial and temporal variation in larval settlement of reefbuilding corals in mariculture

被引:36
|
作者
Petersen, D
Laterveer, M
Schuhmacher, H
机构
[1] Rotterdam Zoo, NL-3000 AM Rotterdam, Netherlands
[2] Univ Duisburg Essen, Inst Ecol, Dept Hydrobiol, D-45117 Essen, Germany
关键词
coral; settlement; light; algae; grazer; mariculture;
D O I
10.1016/j.aquaculture.2005.04.048
中图分类号
S9 [水产、渔业];
学科分类号
0908 ;
摘要
When applying sexual reproduction in coral mariculture, success highly depends on optimizing larval settlement rates. Various environmental factors influencing settlement are known from field-related research; however, hardly any literature is currently available dealing with larval settlement behaviour under mariculture conditions. We investigated the influence of the biofilm (=biotic surface structure) of settlement tiles, which were incubated under different aquarium conditions, on the settlement behaviour of two reefbuilding corals. Two different types of tiles representing vertical and horizontal surfaces were incubated under (1) 250 W HQI 6000 K (=6 K daylight color temperature) and under (2) 250 W HQI 20,000 K (=20 K blue color temperature) either (3) with grazers (hermit crabs, Paguristes spp.; 100 spec. m(-2)), or (4) without any grazers. More than 99% of the resulting biofilm was described by 6 'algal groups' of which the 4 most dominant ones were further analyzed: surfaces incubated without grazers were dominated by (1) filamentous algae (91.4-100.0%), those incubated with grazers were defined by (2) turf algae (17.9-90.2%), (3) coralline algae (0.1-43.6%), and (4) surfaces without any visible biofilm (9.8-68.6%). The light coloration and the shape of the tiles additionally influenced the composition of the biofilm. In controlled settlement experiments, larvae of Agaricia humilis (0.5-40.5% settlement) and of Favia fragum (5.5-57.0% settlement) clearly preferred to settle on tiles previously incubated with grazers. Here, A. humilis showed significant preferences for those tiles incubated under blue light, whereas F fragum showed no preferences. Overall, F fragum strictly preferred to settle in grooves of flat tiles; A. humilis highly preferred to settle in the grooves, however, preferences for tile type changed with tile incubation. In both species, regression analyses showed a positive correlation between larval settlement and the presence of short algal turf and non-colonized surfaces, whereas filamentous algae inhibited settlement. Contrary to previous studies, the presence of coralline algae was not correlated to larval settlement. Our observations emphasize the importance of appropriate substrate incubation in coral mariculture. We further observed temporal and intraspecific variation of settlement in A. humilis (settlement: 14.5% after: <= 12 h; 52.6% after 12-26 h; < 10% after >36 h) and in F.fragum (settlement: 42.1% after <= 12 h; 55% after 12-26 h; < 10% after > 36 h), which is of great relevance in mariculture and needs further investigation. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:317 / 327
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Ex situ spawning, larval development, and settlement in massive reef-building corals (Porites) in Palau
    Bennett, Matthew-James
    Grupstra, Carsten G. B.
    Da-Anoy, Jeric
    Andres, Maikani
    Holstein, Daniel
    Rossin, Ashley
    Davies, Sarah W.
    Meyer-Kaiser, Kirstin S.
    INVERTEBRATE BIOLOGY, 2024, 143 (04)
  • [42] The contribution of nearshore oceanography to temporal variation in larval dispersal
    Catalano, Katrina A.
    Drenkard, Elizabeth J.
    Curchitser, Enrique N.
    Dedrick, Allison G.
    Stuart, Michelle R.
    Montes Jr, Humberto R.
    Pinsky, Malin L.
    ECOLOGY, 2024, 105 (10)
  • [43] SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL HETEROGENEITY OF LARVAL SHAD IN A LARGE IMPOUNDMENT
    ALLEN, MS
    DEVRIES, DR
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN FISHERIES SOCIETY, 1993, 122 (06) : 1070 - 1079
  • [44] Correlates of spatial variation in settlement of two tropical damselfishes
    Schmitt, RJ
    Holbrook, SJ
    MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH, 2002, 53 (02) : 329 - 337
  • [45] Spatial and temporal variation in the genetic composition of a larval cod (Gadus morhua) aggregation: Cohort contribution and genetic stability
    Ruzzante, DE
    Taggart, CT
    Cook, D
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 1996, 53 (12) : 2695 - 2705
  • [46] Temporal and spatial variation in zooplankton populations in the River Great Ouse: An ephemeral food resource for larval and juvenile fish
    Bass, JAB
    Pinder, LCV
    Leach, DV
    REGULATED RIVERS-RESEARCH & MANAGEMENT, 1997, 13 (03): : 245 - 258
  • [47] LARVAL DISPERSAL DISTANCE AS AN EXPLANATION FOR ADULT SPATIAL PATTERN IN 2 CARIBBEAN REEF CORALS
    CARLON, DB
    OLSON, RR
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY, 1993, 173 (02) : 247 - 263
  • [48] Temporal, spatial, and interspecific variation in geochemical signatures within fish otoliths, bivalve larval shells, and crustacean larvae
    Carson, Henry S.
    Lopez-Duarte, Paola C.
    Cook, Geoffrey S.
    Fodrie, F. Joel
    Becker, Bonnie J.
    DiBacco, Claudio
    Levin, Lisa A.
    MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2013, 473 : 133 - +
  • [49] Temporal and spatial variation in Southwestern cranial variation.
    Nelson, Greg C.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, 2010, : 176 - 176
  • [50] Precision and spatial variation of cyathostomin mucosal larval counts
    Nielsen, Martin K.
    Martin, Avery N.
    Scare, Jessica A.
    Steuer, Ashley E.
    VETERINARY PARASITOLOGY, 2021, 290