2005
DOI: 10.5657/kfas.2005.38.1.012
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Effects of Temperature and Salinity on Productivity and Growth of Five Copepod Species

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Cited by 5 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…The growth data therefore suggest that P. nana has the potential for mass culture as a live feed organism for fish larvae (Table 4). According to Lee and Park (2005), P. nana is a planktonic brackish water cyclopoid copepod with a higher tolerance to salinity and temperature ranges, and could easily be cultured at higher culture densities than the harpacticoids T. japonicus. In view of this, a comprehensive investigation on the potentials of other cyclopoid species is a vital yardstick to the availability of copepods as live feeds in marine fish larviculture.…”
Section: Intensive Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The growth data therefore suggest that P. nana has the potential for mass culture as a live feed organism for fish larvae (Table 4). According to Lee and Park (2005), P. nana is a planktonic brackish water cyclopoid copepod with a higher tolerance to salinity and temperature ranges, and could easily be cultured at higher culture densities than the harpacticoids T. japonicus. In view of this, a comprehensive investigation on the potentials of other cyclopoid species is a vital yardstick to the availability of copepods as live feeds in marine fish larviculture.…”
Section: Intensive Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Intensive research needs to direct towards the potential of other cyclopoid species that could use as live feed for fish larvae. According to Lee and Heum Gi (), Paracyclops nana is a planktonic brackish water cyclopoid copepod with a higher tolerance to salinity and temperature ranges, which has excellent potential for use as a live feed in marine fish larviculture. They conducted a study on the mass culture of the cyclopoid copepod, Paracyclopina nana , with different algal diets in single and mixed forms.…”
Section: Copepodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These organisms were fed with mixed algae composed of Tetraselmis suecica and Isochrysis galbana on a daily basis. The culture medium was fully changed every tenth day (Lee & Park ).…”
Section: Specific Population Growth Rate (Mean ± Se) Of Paracyclopinamentioning
confidence: 99%