Thermal tolerance of paralarvae of Patagonian red octopus Enteroctopus megalocyathus

Uriarte, Iker; Rosas, carlos; Espinoza, Viviana; Hernandez, Jorge; Farias, Ana

Keywords: acclimation response, artificial incubation, Enteroctopus megalocyathus, maternal care, paralarvae, thermal requirement

Abstract

Patagonian red octopus, Enteroctopus megalocyathus, is a merobenthic octopus whose paralarvae have been successfully cultured up to juvenile octopuses. At present, high mortality during the paralarval period prevents the scaling from experimental rearing to commercial aquaculture. The aim of the study was to determine upper (CTMax) and lower (CTMin) thermal tolerance, acclimation response ratio (ARR) and thermal tolerance polygon of paralarvae from different culture conditions and subjected to seven acclimation temperatures (6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18°C) during the first 5 days of paralarval life. Culture conditions were two types of egg incubation (maternal care and artificial incubators) and two feeding regimes (fed or starved). Fed paralarvae showed thermal preferendum, while unfed paralarvae preferred much higher temperatures than those of acclimation. CTMin and CTMax increased along with the acclimation temperature. Lower values of ARR were obtained in paralarvae from artificial incubation, with this type of paralarva showing the least adaptability to thermal changes. Starved paralarvae showed the lowest values for thermal tolerance range (TTR) and smaller areas of thermal polygon than fed paralarvae. Rearing temperatures above 16°C may be considered suboptimal to paralarvae and affected by the conditions during the embryonic incubation. Rearing temperatures below 8°C may be considered suboptimal for all hatched paralarvae. Therefore, the other temperatures within this range could be used in the context of improving the culture management of paralarvae.

Más información

Título de la Revista: AQUACULTURE RESEARCH
Volumen: 49
Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 2018
Página de inicio: 2119
Página final: 2127
Idioma: English
DOI:

DOI: 10.1111/are.13666

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS