106 research outputs found

    Land-based, closed-cycle echiniculture of <i>Paracentrotus lividus</i> (Lamarck) (Echinoldea: Echinodermata): a long-term experiment at a pilot scale

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    Today, most sea urchins fisheries worldwide must deal with overexploitation. Better management of exploited field populations and/or aquaculture is increasingly considered necessary to sustain sea urchin production in the future. In this context, we evaluate the potential of land-based, closed-cycle echiniculture. A long-term experiment with the edible sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus has been done on a pilot scale. The process allows total independence from natural resources, because the entire biological cycle of the echinoids is under control (closed-cycle echiniculture), and all activities are performed on land. Furthermore, a method has been set up to control the reproductive cycle with the aim to produce marketable individuals all year long. Performances obtained on each stage of the rearing process are quantified and analyzed. Overall, the results of this experiment are promising; however, some problems remain to be solved before we can claim profitability. The most important finding is that land-based, closed-cycle echiniculture is a potential viable supplement to fisheries to sustain worldwide sea urchin roe production

    Crystallographic and magnetic properties of UFe5.8Al6.2 single crystals

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    Single crystals of UFe5.8Al6.2 were characterised by X-ray and neutron diffraction, 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy and magnetisation. The structure refinement by X-ray and neutron diffraction shows a ThMn12-type structure, the Fe atoms fully occupying the 8f and partially occupying the 8j positions. Mössbauer spectra confirm these occupations and further indicate a magnetic ordering below 293 K. Magnetisation measurements show a ferromagnetic behaviour below 300 K, with a and b as easy directions and a spontaneous magnetisation of 10.4 [mu]B/f.u. at 5 K, due to the Fe occupation of 8j position. These single crystal results significantly differ from those previously obtained in UFe6Al6 polycrystalline samples obtained by melting and annealing.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6TJJ-3V7WTYX-N/1/f7893080a7f27a628198f02aeb40fe2

    Optimization of gonad growth by manipulation of temperature and photoperiod in cultivated sea urchins, <i>Paracentrotus lividus</i> (Lamarck) (Echinodermata)

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    A starvation and then feeding method was developed to produce about 100% marketable sea urchins, Paracentrotus lividus, in 3 1/2 months. This method is needed because the reproduction cycle is desynchronized in the conditions imposed during the somatic growth stage in land-based closed systems. The major advantages of starving the animals are resetting the reproductive cycle to the spent stage (gonads almost devoid of sexual cells) and stressing the individuals so that they mobilize and restore the nutritive phagocytes, filling them with nutrients. Batches of sea urchins starved 2 months beforehand were fed ad libitum for 45 days with enriched food under eight combinations of four temperatures (12 degrees C, 16 degrees C, 20 degrees C and 24 degrees C) and two photoperiods (9 and 17 h daylight). In our system, the best combination was 24 degrees C and 9 h daylight for growth as well as for gonad quality. The gonadal indices obtained (in dry weight) were over 9% at 16 degrees C and over 12% at 24 degrees C, which are better than what is found in the field for this population
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