Abstract

This study investigates how simulation of condensed winter light conditions effects the growth of wild caught Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus L.) held in culture. After capturing from Altevatn, Northern Norway, juvenile Arctic charr were cultivated and subsequently individually divided into two groups. The fish were held under identical conditions from May to October including continuous light. Starting from week 41 after capture (October) one group was subjected to a winter light regime of 6 h light and 18 h dark per day (Winter Light group—WL), while light regimes in the second group remained continuous (Light group). After an eight weeks treatment period the WL-group was reverted to the continuous light regime until the experiment ended in May 2007. Results revealed no pre-treatment differences in growth between the two groups. However, starting from two months after the short day treatment, fishes from the WL group had significant higher growth rates compared to L group fish. At the end of the experiment, e.g. five months after the light treatment, fishes from WL group had increased their average body weight by 353 g as compared to 252 g in the L group. Consequently, results show that simulation of winter light conditions can increase the productivity of land-based Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus L.) cultivation by 25 to 30%. Thus, management of wild caught charr farming, great care should be taken as to what light regimes the fish are exposed to.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call