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The Effects of Water Exchange on Production of Metapenaeus macleayi and Water Quality in Experimental Pools
Author(s) -
Allan Geoff L.,
Maguire Greg B.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
journal of the world aquaculture society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.655
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1749-7345
pISSN - 0893-8849
DOI - 10.1111/j.1749-7345.1993.tb00163.x
Subject(s) - shrimp , biology , water quality , zoology , biomass (ecology) , nitrate , nutrient , chlorophyll a , phytoplankton , phosphorus , fishery , ecology , botany , chemistry , organic chemistry
Two experiments in 4 m diameter, plastic lined pools were conducted nt two densities, 20 shrimp/ m 2 and 47 shrimp/m 2 , to determine the effects of water exchange rate on the production of the penaeid shrimp Metapenaeus macleayi (Haswell) and on water quality variables. Water exchange rates ranged from 0–40%/d for the 9 wk low density experiment and 0–20%/d for the 8 wk high density experiment. With the exception of mass mortality after prawns escaped from one pool (0% water exchange) on the last day of the high density experiment, shrimp performance indices (survival, weight gain, biomass gain and food conversion ratio) were not significantly affected by water exchange rate. During both experiments water exchange significantly reduced the concentrations of phosphorus and plant pigments (chlorophyll a, b and c and pheophytin) but had no significant effect on pH or the concentration of ammonia or nitrite plus nitrate. Data from this study suggest that while production ponds should not be managed for extended periods without water exchange, simply increasing daily water exchange rates may not necessarily increase shrimp growth or survival. Water exchange can reduce nutrient concentrations and phytoplankton densities but most of the reduction occurs at water exchange rates of between 0–5%/d.

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