The pathogenicity of shell lesions in Haliotis iris Martyn was examined in a laboratory experiment in which 73 apparently healthy and 106 lesion-bearing abalone were maintained for up to 12 mo. The abalone were collected from the wild and kept in cages (1 ind. cage-1) for 4, 8 or 12 mo, at which times estimates of survival, growth, condition and reproductive capacity were made for each of 3 groups: 'healthy' (n = 73), 'mildly affected' (n = 61) and 'severely affected' (n = 32). Unaffected abalone showed a 2.7% mortality (n = 73) compared to 7.5% (n = 93) in lesion-bearing individuals over the entire experiment. Growth rates were significantly decreased in mildly and severely affected abalone: the relative von Bertalanffy growth coefficient (K), calculated over 12 mo, was -0.176 for unaffected, -0.079 for mildly affected and -0.048 for severely affected individuals. The asymptotic length (L∞) was calculated to be 131.5 mm for unaffected, 142.1 mm for mildly affected and 150.3 mm for severely affected abalone. Significantly (p < 0.05) lower condition indices and decreased reproductive capacity (p > 0.05) were obtained for the severely affected group compared to unaffected abalone. These trends were consistent over the course of the experiment.
CITATION STYLE
Nollens, H. H., Keogh, J. A., & Probert, P. K. (2003). Effects of shell lesions on survival, growth, condition and reproduction in the New Zealand blackfoot abalone Haliotis iris. Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 57(1–2), 127–133. https://doi.org/10.3354/dao057127
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