The effects of concentration and particle size of suspended materials on growth and condition of the Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas)

The effects of exposure to suspended silt, kaolin and fuller's earth on growth and condition of Pacific oysters, 16 months of age, were studied. The exposure apparatus maintained a continuous flow of turbid water through chambers containing test oysters. Additional studies measured the filtrati...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wilson, William Joseph
Other Authors: Caldwell, Richard S., Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University. Graduate School
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
unknown
Published: Oregon State University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/2514np862
Description
Summary:The effects of exposure to suspended silt, kaolin and fuller's earth on growth and condition of Pacific oysters, 16 months of age, were studied. The exposure apparatus maintained a continuous flow of turbid water through chambers containing test oysters. Additional studies measured the filtration rates of oysters exposed to suspended sediments, and microscopic examinations of sediment transport on excised gill tissue were made. Growth was assessed as total wet weight increase over two-week exposures to sediments. Normal wet weight increase under field conditions averaged 2.30 percent and was similar to that found under laboratory conditions. Laboratory growth, under conditions of flowing, unfiltered seawater, was comparable to growth when test animals were fed laboratory cultured algae in filtered seawater. Silt particles, 104 to 149 μ and 74 to 104 μ in size, did not inhibit growth. Silt particles 38 to 74 μ in diameter appeared to reduce growth at 0.65 and 1.06 g/liter, with the intensity of effect increasing with an increase in silt concentration. No statistically significant growth reduction occurred after exposure to silt particles <38 μ in size, although visual inspection suggested that some reduction may have occurred at 1.61 g/liter. Kaolin particles 0.2 μ , 1.5 μ and 9.5 μ in size significantly reduced growth of oysters in the range of 0.36 to 1. 81 g/liter, with the level of growth inhibition increasing with kaolin concentration. Many animals appeared to lose weight as a result of exposure to kaolin sediments. Similarly, growth was reduced as the concentration of 5 μ fuller's earth increased from 0. 20 to 1.37 g/liter. None of the sediments tested had a marked effect on condition index, except in tests employing silt particles 74 to 104 μ in size. Although a significant reduction in condition was observed in this test, it was concluded that this may have been an anomalous result. Filtration rates of oysters exposed to all particle sizes of kaolin and fuller's earth appeared to decrease in response ...