The system consists of 2 adjoining 150 litre aquaria, one functioning as the water-conditioning tank and the other as the principal rearing tank. Water quality remained high with biological and mechanical filtration, physical adsorption and ultraviolet-light disinfection taking place exclusively in the conditioning tank. The pH ranged from 7·58 to 8·00 and ammonia and nitrite levels never exceeded 0·004 mg/l and 0·198 mg/l, respectively. Nitrate levels were maintained at 40 mg/l or less with no adverse affects. Adult octopuses readily mated and females produced 50-150 eggs, with 95% hatching success. When fed small live crabs, the octopus hatchlings were reared to sexual maturity either in groups or individually in about 120-150 days. Growth rates (4% bodyweight/day) and food conversion efficiences (30-40%) were as high as those obtained in open systems by previous workers. © 1980, Royal Society of Medicine Press. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Forsythe, J. W., & Hanlon, R. T. (1980). A closed marine culture system for rearing Octopus joubini and other large-egged benthic octopods. Laboratory Animals, 14(2), 137–142. https://doi.org/10.1258/002367780780942737
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