Abstract

We studied the effect of the common ascidian Styela clava on the growth of small holothurians of the species Apostichopus japonicus (Selenka, 1867). In a traditional aquaculture system, the oxygen consumption rates, ammonia excretion rates, and ingestion rates of small A. japonicus were reduced significantly, which suggested that this group was stressed by the presence of large A. japonicus, and that this stress grew stronger with time. Oxygen consumption rates, ammonia excretion rates, and ingestion rates of small A. japonicus in an integrated aquaculture (IA) system with S. clava, microalgae, and A. japonicus were higher than those observed in the traditional culture system. Metabolic and digestive enzymes were more active in small A. japonicus in the IA system than in those in the traditional aquaculture system. These results suggest that the IA model did not affect the growth of large A. japonicas, but produced a marked positive impact on the growth of small individuals.

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