Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Gilles Sylvain, Fargier L., Lazzaro Xavier, Baras Etienne, De Wilde N., Drakides C., Amiel C., Rispal B., Blancheton J. P. (2013). An integrated fish-plankton aquaculture system in brackish water. Animal, 7 (2), p. 322-329. ISSN 1751-7311.

Titre du document
An integrated fish-plankton aquaculture system in brackish water
Année de publication
2013
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000313218900018
Auteurs
Gilles Sylvain, Fargier L., Lazzaro Xavier, Baras Etienne, De Wilde N., Drakides C., Amiel C., Rispal B., Blancheton J. P.
Source
Animal, 2013, 7 (2), p. 322-329 ISSN 1751-7311
Integrated Multi-Trophic Aquaculture takes advantage of the mutualism between some detritivorous fish and phytoplankton. The fish recycle nutrients by consuming live (and dead) algae and provide the inorganic carbon to fuel the growth of live algae. In the meanwhile, algae purify the water and generate the oxygen required by fishes. Such mechanism stabilizes the functioning of an artificially recycling ecosystem, as exemplified by combining the euryhaline tilapia Sarotherodon melanotheron heudelotii and the unicellular alga Chlorella sp. Feed addition in this ecosystem results in faster fish growth but also in an increase in phytoplankton biomass, which must be limited. In the prototype described here, the algal population control is exerted by herbivorous zooplankton growing in a separate pond connected in parallel to the fish-algae ecosystem. The zooplankton production is then consumed by tilapia, particularly by the fry and juveniles, when water is returned to the main circuit. Chlorella sp. and Brachionus plicatilis are two planktonic species that have spontaneously colonized the brackish water of the prototype, which was set-up in Senegal along the Atlantic Ocean shoreline. In our system, water was entirely recycled and only evaporation was compensated (1.5% volume/day). Sediment, which accumulated in the zooplankton pond, was the only trophic cul-de-sac. The system was temporarily destabilized following an accidental rotifer invasion in the main circuit. This caused Chlorella disappearance and replacement by opportunist algae, not consumed by Brachionus. Following the entire consumption of the Brachionus population by tilapias, Chlorella predominated again. Our artificial ecosystem combining S. m. heudelotii, Chlorella and B. plicatilis thus appeared to be resilient. This farming system was operated over one year with a fish productivity of 1.85 kg/m(2) per year during the cold season (January to April).
Plan de classement
Ressources halieutiques [040]
Description Géographique
SENEGAL
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010058863] ; La Paz
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010058863
Contact