SUMMARY:
A total of 325 pueruli of the spiny lobster Panulirus japonicus was successfully reared in the laboratory at Minami‐Iku Station of Japan Sea‐Farming Association, Shizuoka, Japan, during 1989–1997. Of these pueruli, 136 individuals metamorphosed into the first juvenile stage. The duration of the phyllosoma stage ranged from 231 to 417 days (mean 319.4 days), and it has a tendency to extend as the increase of water volume in the rearing tanks. The number of molting in the phyllosoma stage was 20–31. The body length of the last‐stage phyllosoma ranged from 27.9 to 34.2 mm and the duration of the last stage was 11–26 days. The carapace length of the puerulus stage was 6.0–8.0 mm and the duration was 9–26 days. The present data and those of previous studies suggest that the body size and the duration of phyllosoma stage in captivity are affected by environment as in the field. The duration of the puerulus stage is considered to be controlled basically by water temperature and nutritional conditions in the phyllosoma.
The effect of Artemia nauplii enriched with different level of vitamin A (VA) palmitate (1 µg = 1 IU) on the occurrence of hypermelanosis on the blind side of Japanese flounder Paralichthys olivaceus was determined. Artemia were enriched with 0, 1, 2, 5 or 10 mg VA palmitate/L (control group, and 1-, 2-, 5-, and 10-mg groups). The enriched Artemia were fed to the larvae from 27 to 31 days post hatching (dph) corresponding to the F-G stage. VA palmitate, retinol and retinoic acid (RA) contents of Artemia were correlatively elevated with increasing VA palmitate in the culture medium. RA was detected in Artemia enriched with 5 mg and 10 mg, and a significantly high frequency of hypermelanosis on the blind side was observed in these groups at 65 dph (P < 0.05). These results suggest that RA synthesized from VA palmitate in Artemia could induce hypermelanosis on blind side of flounder when Artemia are enriched with more than 5 mg VA palmitate/L.
This study examined the capacity of Japanese spiny lobster Panulirus japonicus phyllosoma larvae to absorb nutrients directly from the surrounding water. For this purpose, 48-, 81-, 124-, 160-, and 264-day-old intermoult larvae were starved for 48 h, held for 30 min to 4 h in 0.05 g L ±1 solutions or dispersions of cholesterol, peanut oil, saccharose and horseradish peroxidase in seawater, and subsequently examined by histological and ultrastructural methods. Lipids, carbohydrate, and protein were detected in either the lumen of the midgut gland tubules, the midgut gland cells, the haemolymph or in the cells of the epidermis of all larvae examined after each experimental period, with general improvement of the cell and tissue characteristics over unfed controls. The lipids were also found in the cuticle. Thus, the results provide evidence of nutrient absorption via the digestive tract, and possibly also via the integument. Structural adaptations that may be involved in the process of absorption were tentatively identi®ed. Our observations suggest the possibility that particulate organic matter (POM) and dissolved organic matter (DOM) can be utilized by the P. japonicus phyllosoma larvae, perhaps as supplementary sources of nutrients to macroscopic diets.
KEY WORDS
-1). Thus, the results of this study provide clear confirmation that, in addition to the known mode of oral feeding on macroscopic food masses, P. japonicus phyllosoma larvae are also able to absorb nutrients directly from the surrounding medium.
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