Title: Optimization of Zebra Danio Performance
1Optimization of Zebra DanioPerformance
BY Dallas E. Weaver, Ph.D. Scientific
Hatcheries Huntington Beach, Ca
2The Devil is in the Details
- The biology of zebra fish interacts with the
culture system, water chemistry, husbandry
details and nutrition.
3Aquatic Animals vs. Land Animals
- Designing and operating zebra systems is a lot
like trying to design and operate mice systems in
zero G. You dont have gravity to separate the
waste products from the animals.
4Performance
- Definition of performance
- Egg production and fertility
- Embryo development and hatching
- Larval survival and initial growth
- Growth rate
- Maturation -- egg to egg time
5Egg production and fertility
- Number of eggs per gm of female
- Fertilization percentage
- Cannibalism
- Egg health -- yoke size
6Factors impacting egg production
- Water quality
- Metabolic waste products -- non-detectable
- Ammonia, nitrite lt 0.05 ppm in tank input water
- Other chemicals
- Nitrate 0 to 75 ppm
- Salinity 100 to 2,000 ppm
- pH 6.0 to 8.0
- Temperature 20.5 ºC to 28.5 ºC
- Pushing the limit on one variable reduces the
range of other variables.
7Factors impacting egg production
- Nutrition
- No real research into zebra maturation diets
- Quality aquaculture diets all have short shelf
life problems. Age dating, inventory cycling. - Omega-3 fatty acid requirements
- Vitamin requirements
- Water soluble (C, B, etc) -- leaching problem
- Oil soluble (E)
8Factors impacting egg production
- Nutrition practice by Scientific Hatcheries
- Dry diet of custom formulated modified salmon
diet. High fishmeal protein, unsaturated fats
(high omega-3 fats). - Frozen adult artemia
- Live moina, rotifers, artemia for maximum
production.
9Factors impacting egg production
- Cycling
- Observation that off cycle fish have low
fertility. - May be related to over-ripe eggs
- Density
- At densities gt 10,000 / M2 of spawning surface
fertility decreases.
10Performance
- Definition of performance
- Egg production and fertility
- Embryo development and hatching
- Larval survival and initial growth
- Growth rate
- Maturation -- egg to egg time
11Embryo development
- Impacts on development
- Chemical stress from water quality
- Non-viable embryo problem -- static systems
- Toxins from materials
- Interaction between embryos may impact sex ratio
- Unstable microbiology -- bacterial/fungal attack
on the embryos
12Embryo development
- Chemical stress from water quality
- Static systems
- Non-viable embryos source of pollutants
- Food supply for bacteria
- Ratio of volume per embryo critical
- Depth irrelevant
- Surface tension will be relevant at hatch
- Flowing system
- Water quality determined by source water.
13Toxins from materials
- Bioassay all materials
- Test materials with embryos and larva
- Problems materials
- Rubber -- black rubber
- Vinyl tubing, brass valves at low alkalinity
- Cleaning solutions and sterilization solutions
- Solutions
- Rinsing, leaching and materials selection
- Flowing water
14Embryo development
- Interaction between embryos may impact sex ratio
- Static systems can have interactions
- Many researchers have sex ratio problem
- Hypothesis developing embryos can release
chemicals that can impact the development of
other embryos exposed to those chemicals.
15Embryo development
- Unstable microbiology -- bacterial/fungal attack
on the embryos - Static systems -- dishes, beakers, etc.
- Dead embryos and non-viable embryos provide
nutrients for bacteria and fungal growth - Once fungal or bacterial attach on non-viable,
attack on viable embryos is possible - Flowing systems
- Upflow system -- not a problem
- Non-upflow -- fungal problems
16Embryo development
- System options
- Static systems
- All the problems
- Easier to work with embryos
- Fluidized Bed Hatchers
- Eliminates the problems of static system
- Automatic non-viable removal
- Automatic fungus egg removal
17Embryo Development
- What is a Fluidized bed Hatcher
- A fluidized column of glass bead media with a
fluidized column of embryos behaving like a
second phase fluid - With a constant up-flow velocity, non-viable
embryos swell up and float out of the hatcher. - Every embryo has a constant supply of clean water
which decreases developmental differences caused
by oxygen differences in static systems.
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20Performance
- Definition of performance
- Egg production and fertility
- Embryo development and hatching
- Larval survival and initial growth
- Growth rate
- Maturation -- egg to egg time
21Larval survival
- Ideal is 100 survival for all normal embryos
- Factors causing unnecessary mortality
- Water quality
- Nutrition
- Weak larva
22Larval survival
- Factors causing unnecessary mortality
- Water quality
- Normal pollutants, ammonia, nitrite and metabolic
waste products, low oxygen - Surface tension -- oil film -- swim bladder
inflation - Toxic chemicals
- Bacterial/protozoan explosion
23Larval survival
- Factors causing unnecessary mortality
- Water quality (continued)
- Surface tension -- oil film -- swim bladder
inflation - Zebra fish need surface access for filling the
swim bladder. - Common problem with other aquaculture species
(striped bass, white bass, etc.) - Solution is keeping the surface free of oil
- Tank depth is irrelevant.
24Larval survival
- Factors causing unnecessary mortality
- Water quality
- Nutrition
- Weak larva
25Larval survival
- Factors causing unnecessary mortality
- Nutrition
- First food is critical
- Notes from Aquaculture
- Larval fish/shrimp production is a multi-billion
business - Dry diets cant replace 100 of live feeds for
all small larva species. Dry diets are only
supplements to cut the cost of live feeds. - When dry diets appear to work, it is often the
bacterial/protozoan contamination of that diet
that allows it to work. - Leaching of critical nutrients from dry diets is
very fast
26Larval survival
- Factors causing unnecessary mortality
- Nutrition (continued)
- Notes from Aquaculture (continued)
- Rotifers (brackish water species) is the most
common small live feed. For species where new
hatched artemia is too large. - Rotifers are often enriched before feeding with
algae or prepared omega-3 fat blends. - Rotifers can be packed with antibiotics or other
chemicals. - Can be purchased alive or produced locally.
27Larval survival
- Factors causing unnecessary mortality
- Nutrition (continued)
- Notes from Aquaculture (continued)
- Artemia napulii
- Easy to hatch
- Nutrition value decreases with time when un-fed
- Nutrition value variable
- Enrichment is a common practice -- improved fatty
acid profiles and amino acid profiles are
possible - Digestive enzymes are limited in many larval fish
- Depend upon live food to provide
28Larval survival
- Factors causing unnecessary mortality
- Water quality
- Nutrition
- Weak larva
29Larval survival
- Factors causing unnecessary mortality
- Weak Larva
- Can be caused by poor adult nutrition
- Stressing the larva during development
- Stressing the larva with high density
- Social interaction problem
- Too much turbulence wasting energy reserves
- A problem with McDonald jars for hatching
30Performance
- Definition of performance
- Egg production and fertility
- Embryo development and hatching
- Larval survival and initial growth
- Growth rate
- Maturation -- egg to egg time
31Growth rate
- Factors impacting growth rates
- Temperature
- Water quality
- Nutrition
- Density
32Growth rate
- Factors impacting growth rates
- Temperature
- There is a maximum above which metabolism is
greater than digestible feed consumption. - With a low quality diet, the rearing temperature
could be above the maximum. - Apparently parameters are not available for a
zebra fish bio-energetic model.
33Growth rate
- Factors impacting growth rates
- Temperature
- Water quality
- Nutrition
- Density
34Growth rate
- Factors impacting growth rates
- Water quality
- Low Oxygen levels decrease growth
- Very high unionized ammonia levels
- gt 20 ppb unionized
- Pheromones give an apparent density dependence
that is not real.
35Growth rate
- Factors impacting growth rates
- Temperature
- Water quality
- Nutrition
- Density
36Growth rate
- Factors impacting growth rates
- Nutrition
- This is a critical element
- Live feeds are the best
- Enrichment is desired
- All they can eat all the time
- 7 days a week
- Excess feed and old feed may decrease growth rate
and support enteric diseases.
37Growth rate
- Factors impacting growth rates
- Temperature
- Water quality
- Nutrition
- Density
38Growth rate
- Factors impacting growth rates
- Density
- Often misinterpretation of observations
- Apparent impacts from water quality
- Apparent impacts from nutrition
- Real impacts result from social interaction
- Real impact density gt 35/liter for zebra fish or
1.5 zebra fish in the water - Below those levels, apparent density impacts of
slow growth, growth variation, etc. are artifacts
of other problems.
39Performance
- Definition of performance
- Egg production and fertility
- Embryo development and hatching
- Larval survival and initial growth
- Growth rate
- Maturation -- egg to egg time
40Maturation -- egg to egg time
- Putting it all together and adapting commercial
aquaculture technology to zebra fish - Use a standard Aquaneering FBB rack system
- Use standard zebra research artemia hatching tank
-- tank for automated feeding - Use de-chlorinated tap water at 28.5 ºC
41Maturation -- egg to egg time
- Special additions
- Fluidized Bed Hatchers for development
- Black tanks for experiment on tank color
(significant for many species of fish) - Peristaltic feed pump -- automated feeding
- Timer, rotifer supply, artemia supply (enriched)
- Inlet diffuser for mixing feed with main flow
- Turbulent flow control valves on each tank
- Fine discharge screen baffles -- 300 µ
42Maturation -- egg to egg time
- Additions (continued)
- Air injection behind screen (improved oxygen
transfer without excessive turbulence) - Monitoring of salinity -- live food additions
were with brackish water
43Maturation -- egg to egg time
- The experiment
- Four clear tank, Four Black, Four density classes
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46ResultsEGG to EGG 49 days
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