Abstract

Bivalve cultures support a host of epibionts, mainly suspension feeders, which can compete for food resources with the cultivated bivalves. However, the magnitude of interspecific competition for food in bivalve aquaculture settings remains inconclusive, especially in tropical areas. We investigated the interactions for food between the farmed pearl oyster Pinctada margar- itifera and its epibionts, using stable isotope analysis and feeding experiments. Inter- and intra- specific variations of δ 13 C and δ 15 N stable isotope ratios (SIRs) were determined for oysters in the presence or absence of epibionts. The diet of the most abundant epibionts, Herdmania momus and Didemnum sp., was specified using isotope measurements and flow cytometry during feeding experiments, to determine the main phytoplankton groups consumed by these ascidians in natural conditions. The absence of intraspecific variation in SIRs among oysters with or without epibionts suggested that the diet of P. margaritifera was not affected by the presence of epibionts, indicating a reduced diet overlap and no food limitation. The δ 13 C signature of ascidians (�21‰) was lower than that of oysters (�18‰), indicating a difference in organic matter sources ingested by these filter feeders despite receiving the same food mixture. While the main carbon source of oysters came from large particulate organic matter (POM) >20 µm, our results showed that the diet of ascidians mainly came from smaller particles (POM <20 µm) and reflects the composition of ambi- ent water (mainly picophytoplankton <2 µm), which confirmed their lack of food selectivity. In the studied conditions, food competition between oysters and epibionts, specifically ascidians, was not a limiting factor, in spite of a diet overlap for nanophytoplankton.

Highlights

  • An inherent issue with the development of bivalve aquaculture is biofouling (Cranford et al 2003, Rius et al 2011, Lacoste & Gaertner-Mazouni 2015)

  • The results confirmed the non-selectivity for food by ascidians, whose carbon source mainly originated from picophytoplankton, the dominant group in the oligotrophic waters of French Polynesia

  • The higher δ13C signature of pearl oysters compared with ascidians indicated that carbon sources of pearl oysters originated from larger particles

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Summary

Introduction

An inherent issue with the development of bivalve aquaculture is biofouling (Cranford et al 2003, Rius et al 2011, Lacoste & Gaertner-Mazouni 2015). Biofouling is generally considered a plague for aquaculture (Willemsen 2005, Adams et al 2011), especially because filter feeder epibionts (e.g. ascidians, bivalves) may compete for food with reared bivalves (Claereboudt et al 1994, Lopez et al 2000, Pit & Southgate 2003). Such competition can Publisher: Inter-Research · www.int-res.com. Other authors have suggested complementary and positive trophic interactions between filter feeders (Mook 1981, Arakawa 1990, Mazouni et al 2001)

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