Lipid as an index of growth and viability in three species of bivalve larvae
The larvae of three species of bivalve molluscs, Crassostrea virginica (Gmelin), Ostrea edulis (L.) and Mercenaria mercenaria (L.) were cultured under a variety of temperature and food species regimes in the laboratory. Data were collected on growth, survival, total lipid content and lipid class com...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Aquaculture 1986-01, Vol.56 (2), p.81-103 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The larvae of three species of bivalve molluscs,
Crassostrea virginica (Gmelin),
Ostrea edulis (L.) and
Mercenaria mercenaria (L.) were cultured under a variety of temperature and food species regimes in the laboratory. Data were collected on growth, survival, total lipid content and lipid class composition of both healthy and starved larvae. Subsamples were stained specifically for lipid content with the lipid-specific stain Oil Red O. Newly formed straight hinge larvae of all three species exhibited small lipid droplets dispersed throughout the tissues. These were resorbed within 4 days of the initiation of feeding while the digestive gland filled with exogenously supplied lipid. Embryogenesis took place at the expense of 69 and 71% of parentally derived total lipid, 92.8 and 68.3% of which was composed of triacylglycerols (
M. mercenaria and
C. virginica, respectively). After 8 days of feeding on
Isochrysis aff.
galbana (clone T-ISO), total lipid had increased 2.7-fold in larvae of
C. virginica grown at 25°C, 37.6-fold in larvae of
M. mercenaria grown at 22°C, and 1.7-fold in larvae of
O. edulis grown at 25°C. Shell growth in larvae of
C. virginica grown at 30°C was initially higher than that at 25°C, but lipid was accumulated 2.5 times slower and survival of pediveliger larvae through metamorphosis was considerably reduced at this elevated temperature. The lipid class composition of healthy larvae of
C. virginica and
M. mercenaria was dominated by triacylglycerols and phospholipids in approximately equal proportions; however, triacylglycerols were preferentially catabolized during starvation and were responsible for greater than 80% of the total lipid loss. Color photographs of larvae stained with Oil Red O are presented that illustrate lipid levels in developing larvae in both healthy and poor condition. From these, a visual index of lipid content was developed to allow comparisons between larval survival and lipid levels. In general, high survival was always accompanied by a high lipid index but a high lipid index did not guarantee good survival. We suggest that the lipid index may be used to document visually the lipid content in individual bivalve larvae as an indicator of physiological condition and potential for successful metamorphosis. |
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ISSN: | 0044-8486 1873-5622 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0044-8486(86)90020-7 |