Abstract

Recent progress in the domestication of Eisenia arborea lead us to test this species as an alternative to feed red abalone (Haliotis rufescens) instead of Macrocystis pyrifera, which is the main seaweed used to feed farmed abalone in Baja California, Mexico. E. arborea is the kelp with the largest and most southerly latitudinal distribution on the North Pacific East Coast capable of growing at higher temperatures and in relatively low nutrient conditions. The availability of M. pyrifera is frequently uncertain because it is strongly affected by El Nino events. In order to test E. arborea as a diet for farmed abalone, animals of two different sizes (6 and 2 cm) were fed separately for 12 months with these two seaweed species. The abalones were cultured in cages in an integrated multi-trophic aquaculture farm within San Quintin Bay, Baja California, Mexico. Seaweed was collected for chemical analysis, and every 3 months, animals were measured and weighed to estimate growth. Small size abalone doubled their size on both diets, with an average increase in length of 2.2 mm month−1. No significant differences were observed between both treatments. Large abalone fed with M. pyrifera had slighter higher growth rates compared to those fed with E. arborea (0.57 and 0.50 % day−1, respectively). Although M. pyrifera appeared to be a better diet for large animals, the growth rates obtained with E. arborea and the fact that this species could be cultivated in warmer conditions makes this seaweed species a good candidate to feed farmed abalone.

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