Mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture?
Captive reproduction of spiny lobsters is of substantial interest to aquaculture; however, it has been an elusive goal due to their protracted larval (phyllosoma) phase of development. The prime species for aquaculture is the tropical lobster Panulirus ornatus , it can be cultured from a juvenile to...
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ftunivtasecite:oai:ecite.utas.edu.au:133955 2023-05-15T13:55:18+02:00 Mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture? Smith, G KK, W Nguyen, NH Fitzgibbon, QP 2019 application/pdf http://ecite.utas.edu.au/133955 en eng . http://ecite.utas.edu.au/133955/1/Smith 2019 RAS Tech conf-Spiny lobsters.pdf http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/IH120100032 Smith, G and KK, W and Nguyen, NH and Fitzgibbon, QP, Mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture?, Programme for RAStech 2019, 13-14 May, Washington DC (2019) [Conference Extract] http://ecite.utas.edu.au/133955 Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences Fisheries Sciences Aquaculture Conference Extract NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftunivtasecite 2019-12-13T22:31:38Z Captive reproduction of spiny lobsters is of substantial interest to aquaculture; however, it has been an elusive goal due to their protracted larval (phyllosoma) phase of development. The prime species for aquaculture is the tropical lobster Panulirus ornatus , it can be cultured from a juvenile to adult in 18 months, has high market demand and is currently farmed commercially in South East Asia using wildcaught seedstock. Recent breakthroughs in larval production technology at the University of Tasmanias Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies has changed the outlook for aquaculture of this species with commercialisation of the technology currently underway. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies eCite UTAS (University of Tasmania) Antarctic |
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eCite UTAS (University of Tasmania) |
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ftunivtasecite |
language |
English |
topic |
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences Fisheries Sciences Aquaculture |
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Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences Fisheries Sciences Aquaculture Smith, G KK, W Nguyen, NH Fitzgibbon, QP Mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture? |
topic_facet |
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences Fisheries Sciences Aquaculture |
description |
Captive reproduction of spiny lobsters is of substantial interest to aquaculture; however, it has been an elusive goal due to their protracted larval (phyllosoma) phase of development. The prime species for aquaculture is the tropical lobster Panulirus ornatus , it can be cultured from a juvenile to adult in 18 months, has high market demand and is currently farmed commercially in South East Asia using wildcaught seedstock. Recent breakthroughs in larval production technology at the University of Tasmanias Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies has changed the outlook for aquaculture of this species with commercialisation of the technology currently underway. |
format |
Conference Object |
author |
Smith, G KK, W Nguyen, NH Fitzgibbon, QP |
author_facet |
Smith, G KK, W Nguyen, NH Fitzgibbon, QP |
author_sort |
Smith, G |
title |
Mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture? |
title_short |
Mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture? |
title_full |
Mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture? |
title_fullStr |
Mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture? |
title_sort |
mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture? |
publisher |
. |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
http://ecite.utas.edu.au/133955 |
geographic |
Antarctic |
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Antarctic |
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Antarc* Antarctic Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies |
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Antarc* Antarctic Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies |
op_relation |
http://ecite.utas.edu.au/133955/1/Smith 2019 RAS Tech conf-Spiny lobsters.pdf http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/IH120100032 Smith, G and KK, W and Nguyen, NH and Fitzgibbon, QP, Mass rearing of spiny lobster larvae in recirculation systems - do some broodstock produce larvae better adapted to culture?, Programme for RAStech 2019, 13-14 May, Washington DC (2019) [Conference Extract] http://ecite.utas.edu.au/133955 |
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