• Title/Summary/Keyword: Epibiont

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Growth of abalone (Haliotis discus hannai) in cages using epibiont control measures

  • Han, Jido;Jeon, Mi Ae;Kim, Da Woon;Park, Hon;Kim, Byong Hak;Lee, Deok Chan
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.24 no.12
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    • pp.400-405
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    • 2021
  • In this study, the relationship between the growth of abalone and the presence of epibionts was investigated in abalone cultured in Goheung, Jeollanam-do, where there are severe problems high water temperatures and attachment. The experiment was conducted for eight months (May-December 2020), and 40 abalone were collected every month. Water temperature was at its highest at a range of 13.5℃-26.6℃ and dissolved oxygen levels were at their lowest at a range of 4.0-10.2 ㎍/L in August. The shell height (mm) of abalone grew to 117.7% (81.8 ± 1.9 mm) in cultures where epibionts were removed (ER) and 111% (77.4 ± 3.3 mm) where they were not (non-epibionts, NER). Their total weight (TW) and body weight increased significantly and steadily with ER, whereas the TW increased sharply after August with NER. In the condition index, no significant difference was observed between ER and NER. The monthly proportion of epibionts increased significantly in July, accounting for the value of 69.9% reached in December.

Copepods of the Family Artotrogidae (Siphonostomatoida) from Korea, with Descriptions of Eight New Species

  • Jimin Lee;Il-Hoi Kim
    • Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
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    • v.39 no.4
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    • pp.176-211
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    • 2023
  • Nine copepod species of the family Artotrogidae Brady, 1880 are described or redescribed from Korea. Included new species are two in the genus Artotrogus Boeck, 1859, one each in the genera Bradypontius Giesbrecht, 1895, Cryptopontius Giesbrecht, 1899, Neopontius Scott T., 1898 and Chejupontius n. gen., and two in the genus Sewellopontius Ummerkutty, 1966. Chejupontius n. gen. resembles Ascidipontius Kim I. H., 1996, Pulicitrogus Kim I. H., 1998, and Sewellopontius in having reduced armature of leg 1, but is distinguished from these and other genera of the family by the large, mediodistally expanded protopod of leg 5 and by a combination of characters exhibited in leg 1 that the first exopodal segment lacks an inner seta, the second exopodal segment lacks an outer spine, the third exopodal segment is armed with three spines plus one to three setae, and the second endopodal segment is armed with a single inner seta. Pteropontius cristatus Giesbrecht, 1895 known previously only from the Mediterranean Sea is redescribed, based on a newly collected specimen from Korea, and P. trimerus Kim I. H., 1996 is removed to the genus Sewellopontius. A short note is given for the epibiotic suctorian Thecacineta calix (Schroder, 1907) which was found attached to the antennule of a new copepod species.

Effects of a Commercial Activating Treatment Agent on Cultured Porphyra yezoensis thalli (양식 방사무늬김, Porphyra yezoensis의 활성처리제 처리 효과)

  • Park, Sung-Woo;Kim, Dae-Hyun
    • Journal of fish pathology
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    • v.26 no.3
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    • pp.275-282
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    • 2013
  • The use of activating treatment agent (formerly acid treatment agent) has been an effective strategy to remove deleterious epibiont organisms such as diatoms and green seaweeds, and it has greatly contributed to increase in Porphyra production. Although many manufacturers supply many kinds of activating treatment agent with different components in these days, no report about their effects on Porphyra culture was found. In this paper, effects of a commercial activating treatment agent were evaluated for practical use in Porphyra culture. No difference was found in dead cell ratios(%) of Porphyra yezoensis thalli between treated and control groups. However, dead cell ratios of Monostroma nitidum thalli were increased from 0~4.6% to 99.0~100% after the treatment. Bathing Porphyra thalli in activating treatment agent resulted in a great decrease in epiphytic bacterial number attached to the thalli from $10^2{\sim}10^{11}$ cells/g to $0{\sim}10^5$ cells/g but did not change the colour of the thalli. These results suggest that bathing Porphyra thalli in activating treatment agent could be a promising strategy to remove green algae, diatoms and bacteria.