2016
DOI: 10.1111/are.13000
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Combined effects of temperature, salinity and rearing density on growth and survival of juvenile ivory shell, Babylonia areolata (Link 1807) population in Thailand

Abstract: The ivory shell, Babylonia areolata (Link 1807), has been exploited as an important aquaculture organism along the southern China coast. In order to obtain optimal culture conditions for ivory shell juvenile, the central composite rotatable design was used to estimate the combined effects of temperature, salinity and rearing density on accumulated growth rate (AGR) and survival rate (SR). The results showed that the linear effects of temperature and rearing density on both growth and survival were highly signi… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 66 publications
(144 reference statements)
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“…When the temperature exceeds the optimum temperature for growth, the growth rate will decrease with temperature (Fang, Tian, & Dong, ; Hasan & MacIntoch, ). This results in a bell‐shaped “∩” relationship between growth rate and temperature in many species, such as fish (Fang et al., ; Sun, Chen, & Huang, ), shrimp (Tian, Dong, & Wang, ) and shellfish (Lü et al., ), amongst others. This relationship between growth rate and temperature has been found in abalone as well.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When the temperature exceeds the optimum temperature for growth, the growth rate will decrease with temperature (Fang, Tian, & Dong, ; Hasan & MacIntoch, ). This results in a bell‐shaped “∩” relationship between growth rate and temperature in many species, such as fish (Fang et al., ; Sun, Chen, & Huang, ), shrimp (Tian, Dong, & Wang, ) and shellfish (Lü et al., ), amongst others. This relationship between growth rate and temperature has been found in abalone as well.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The contig-level Babylonia areolata (GCA_011634625.1) genome assembly was the only assembly that contained a significant proportion of ORFs from either malacoherpesvirus, specifically 46 % of HaHV-1 ORFs were detected on 12 contigs of the genome assembly. B. areolata is a marine gastropod mollusc that is cultivated in Asia for seafood [13,14]. In order to assemble the genome of the herpesvirus identified in the B. areolata genome assembly (Fig.…”
Section: Impact Statementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Currently, ivory shells are cultured in semi-outdoor flow-through systems and fed with forage fish (such as Decapterus maruadsi), and their breeding density is approximately 5-8 kg per square meter [3,4]. However, this type of low-tech breeding model is often affected by the fluctuation of various environmental factors, such as temperature, ammonia, and salinity, causing low growth rate and even death [2,4,6].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%