“…Oysters store energy in the form of glycogen instead of fat (Berthelin, Kellner, & Mathieu, 2000;Dridi, Romdhane, & Elcafsi, 2007;Gabbott, 1983;Thompson & Macdonald, 1990). Therefore, we can infer that the nutritional condition of oyster meat observed in the present study was related to increased food availability in the environment, which occurred during the rainy season (Sousa et al, 2013;Vilhena et al, 2014), favouring the uptake of nutrients necessary for the synthesis of glycogen, proteins and lipids related to oocyte growth and maturation in bivalves (Ojea et al, 2004;Oliveira et al, 2018;Paixão et al, 2013;Rodríguez-Jaramillo et al, 2008;Lagade, Taware, & Muley, 2015, Shi, Wu, Zhou, You, &Ke, 2019.…”