1999
DOI: 10.1016/s0990-7440(99)80021-7
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Bivalve hatchery technology: The current situation for the Pacific oyster and the scallop in France

Abstract: Aquat. Living Resow. 12 (2) (I 999) 121-130 / 0 Ifremer/Cnrs/Inra/lrd/Cemagref/Elsevier, ParisReview Bivalve hatchery technology:The current situation for the Pacific oyster Crassostrea @gas and the scallop Peeten maximus in France Renk Robert (a*), Andrk Gerard @) cc3r I nhoratoire de physiologic des inuertt%r~s marins,

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Cited by 137 publications
(106 citation statements)
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“…This process was repeated on alternate days until all larvae had been moved to the settlement room. Pediveliger larvae were settled on microcultch in 120-litre raceways and reared under standard hatchery conditions with continuous water flow, controlled food ration and temperature (Robert and Gérard, 1999). When spat reached 2 mm, they were transported to the IFREMER nursery in Bouin, France.…”
Section: Larval and Spat Culturementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This process was repeated on alternate days until all larvae had been moved to the settlement room. Pediveliger larvae were settled on microcultch in 120-litre raceways and reared under standard hatchery conditions with continuous water flow, controlled food ration and temperature (Robert and Gérard, 1999). When spat reached 2 mm, they were transported to the IFREMER nursery in Bouin, France.…”
Section: Larval and Spat Culturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the last two decades, two spat collection areas, Marennes-Oléron and Arcachon, have provided 90% of all cultivated oysters with only 10% from hatcheries (Robert and Gérard, 1999). Wild spat usually experience about 80% of mortality during the first year, essentially due to predation and overcrowding, before they are distributed at growing sites along the French coast.…”
Section: Survivalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Newkirk (1981) pointed out the unpredictability of growth rates in juvenile oysters due to high phenotypic variability, even under common environmental conditions. Larvae and spat from both hatcheries and natural recruitment have variable and usually low survival rates (Jones and Jones, 1983;Haws et al, 1993;Robert and Gérard, 1999). In addition, phenotypic plasticity has been shown to contribute to the variability in early life history traits in oysters (larval growth and survival: Abdel-Hamid et al, 1992;Lemos et al, 1994, morphology: Strathmann et al, 1993) depending on environmental conditions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…FAO 2004, Henley et al 2001, Robert and Gerard 1999, Soletchnika et al 2000. Depending on species and aquaculture technique there are many protocols in existence in countries where aquaculture has a long tradition (especially France and Japan).…”
Section: Adjustment Of Industrial Aquaculture Techniquesmentioning
confidence: 99%