Low salinity rearing of the Pacific white shrimp litopenaeus vannamei: Acclimation, survival and growth of postlarvae and juveniles

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Abstract

Low salinity rearing of Litopenaeus vannamei requires the transfer of postlarvae (PL) from high salinity hatchery systems to low salinity conditions. In order to determine effective transfer methods, fifteenday-old postlarvae (PL15) were acclimated from a salinity of 30 ppt to endpoint salinities of 1 and 5 ppt using single-step and gradual salinity reduction procedures. Higher survival rates were obtained with gradual acclimation than with single-step acclimation. Survival of PL15 acclimated to 5 ppt was better than that of PL15 acclimated to 1 ppt. Survival of PL15 and juvenile stages in various low salinity treatments ranging from 0-5 ppt was also compared. In the PL stage, survival rates were good (>85%) in salinities over 1.5 ppt. Tolerance to low salinities increased with age and survival rate of juveniles (65%) was higher than that of PL (2%) in freshwater. In our long-term growth trials of juvenile shrimp maintained in different salinities, optimal growth comparable to that in normal seawater was observed in animals reared in a salinity of 5 ppt, demonstrating that L. vannamei can be successfully cultured in low-salinity inland systems.

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Jayasankar, V., Jasmani, S., Nomura, T., Nohara, S., Huong, D. T. T., & Wilder, M. N. (2009). Low salinity rearing of the Pacific white shrimp litopenaeus vannamei: Acclimation, survival and growth of postlarvae and juveniles. Japan Agricultural Research Quarterly, 43(4), 345–350. https://doi.org/10.6090/jarq.43.345

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