Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus was detected in breeding turkeys on 2 farms in Valparaiso, Chile. Infection was associated with measurable declines in egg production and shell quality. Although the source of infection is not yet known, the outbreak was controlled, and the virus was eliminated from the birds.
Recent advances in intensive rearing of astacid juvenile crayfish have greatly improved the results. This challenges the current application possibilities of the studies performed previously, and new research on density is required. A 100-day experiment was carried out under controlled conditions to evaluate density effects on survival and growth rates of juvenile crayfish in optimal conditions of feeding. Juvenile stage 2 Pacifastacus leniusculus were stocked in fibreglass tanks (1 m 2 , 200 l water) at 20 ± 1°C and fed a dry diet for salmonids supplemented with restricted amounts of Artemia nauplii. Stocking densities were 100, 300, 600 and 1,000 crayfish m -2 . Mean survival rate was reduced significantly with increased stocking density, ranging from 86.33% (100 m -2 ) to 39.13% (1,000 m -2 ). All checks showed that at the lowest initial density (100 m -2 ) animals grew significantly faster those at higher densities, recording a final carapace length of 15.28 mm and weight of 1.08 g. Among the treatments of 300, 600 and 1,000 m -2 no differences were found either in carapace length or in weight throughout the experimental period, with a final mean growth of 14 mm carapace length and 0.72 g weight. The final proportion of animals with chelae autotomy rose significantly with increasing stocking density, ranging from 14.44% (100 m -2 ) to 41.45% (1,000 m -2 ). This study shows that diet is a decisive factor for stocking successfully high densities under controlled conditions and provides useful information to set adequate densities in accordance with the production objectives.
A 120-day experiment was performed with 4-month-old juvenile tench [initial mean weight: 0.31 g; total length (TL): 32 mm] to evaluate live Artemia nauplii as supplement to a dry diet for salmonids. All groups received the dry diet. Five treatments, differing in the amount of supplemented Artemia, were tested: without supplement, 450, 900, and 1,800 nauplii g -1 initial fish biomass, and nauplii in excess. Groups that received Artemia supplement had significantly higher survival (between 89.4 and 98.7%) compared to those that received dry diet alone (49.2%), while among them there was no significant difference. Juvenile tench fed the dry diet supplemented with Artemia in excess had a specific growth rate (1.98), weight (3.40 g), and TL (63.90 mm) significantly higher than those in the rest of the treatments. The latter three features were not significantly different under limited co-feeding (450, 900, and 1,800 nauplii g -1 biomass) averaging 1.26 specific growth rate, 1.40 g weight, and 48.50 mm TL. Tench fed the dry diet alone grew significantly less than the rest. Thus, the drawbacks of feeding juvenile tench with dry foods originally formulated for other fish species can be overcome by providing a supplement of Artemia nauplii.
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