At least a hundred indigenous Indian languages are known to have been spoken in Mesoamerica, the cultural area that includes most of Mexico and part of South America, but it is only in the past fifty years that many of them have been adequately described. For some we still have no more than a partial description, often in an obscure source. Professor Suárez draws together this considerable mass of scholarship in a general survey that will provide an invaluable source of reference. The approach is primarily descriptive, and a major part of the volume is concerned with synchronic descriptions of phonology, morphology and syntax. The volume will be of interest and importance both to general linguists and to others with a serious interest in Mesoamerican culture and society.
Mahi-mahi Coryphaena hippurus is a promising species for aquaculture development and has been used as a model species for oil toxicology and physiology studies. This species has one of the fastest growth rates of any marine teleost and a unique reproductive biology due to its high spawning frequency and reproductive energy allocation. These characteristics lend the species to being an excellent model for understanding broodstock nutrition for other high energetic pelagic species. In this study, egg morphometrics and larval survival were tracked over a 10-week period from the initial capture of wild mahi-mahi broodstock. Larval quality from subsequent spawns collected over time was quantified using larval survival activity indices (SAIs) as a metric to assess egg quality. Larval SAIs were maintained and did not significantly decrease (p < .05) over the time course of this study. A multiple linear regression based on the elapsed time in captivity of the broodstock, egg diameter and larval SAI at 1 dph provided the most accurate prediction of larval SAI at 3 dph (R 2 = 0.996 p < .05). There were strong positive correlations with larval SAIs at 1 and 3 dph and the key nutrients: eicosapentaenoic acid (C20: 5n-3, EPA) and related fatty acid ratios, vitamin E and nearly all amino acids under investigation. This study demonstrated that larval survival was maintained over time due to the supply of these key nutrients in the broodstock diet.
K E Y W O R D Sbroodstock, egg quality, mahi-mahi, survival activity index, vitellogenesis
Cobia, Rachycentron canadum, is an important species for aquaculture worldwide. Production technology from egg to market was established in the early 1990s and continues to be perfected to this day. This species exhibits extraordinary scope for growth and can reach between 4 and 8 kg in 1 year, with females growing almost twice as fast and large as males. Despite continuous progress in maturation, spawning, larval rearing, fingerling production, nutrition, health management, genetics, and growout technology, overall cobia aquaculture production worldwide has been slow in the last decade. One of the biggest challenges remains the development of practical commercial feeds that are ecologically and economically efficient for this species.Feed conversion ratios are still very high, ranging from 2.0 to 3.0:1. In addition to nutritional challenges, diseases such as Photobacterium, Amyloodinium ocellatus, and Brooklynella hostilis continue to impact cobia aquaculture production worldwide. Genetics and breeding programs for cobia are still at their infancy. We report on current status of cobia
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