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S. Aurata (s + aurata)
Selected AbstractsEfficacy and toxicity of orally administered anticoccidial drugs for innovative treatments of Polysporoplasma sparis (Sitja-Bobadilla and Alvarez-Pellitero 1985) infection in Sparus aurata L.JOURNAL OF APPLIED ICHTHYOLOGY, Issue 5 2004F. Athanassopoulou Summary The purpose of this study was to test experimentally different drugs and therapeutic schemes in order to find a efficient commercial treatment for fish infected with myxosporeans. Two series of land-based experiments and one experimental cage trial were performed for this purpose. In the first land-based experiment, 10 and 30 g Sparus aurata naturally infected in the kidneys with Polysporoplasma sparis were used. Initially, six different doses of Fumagillin, two doses of Toltrazuril, and one dose of Amprolium, ESB3 and Salinomycin were tested. In the second land-based experiment, 25 and 50 g fish infected with the same parasite were treated with Origanum essential oils, Toltrazuril with propylene glycol, Amprolium, and a combination of Salinomycin 12% + Amprolium (SA). In the field trials, 15 and 155 g S. aurata infected with the same parasite were treated with SA, Origanum essential oils and Fumagillin. In all trials the drugs were incorporated in food and administered according to the selected schemes, while their efficacy was evaluated in terms of mortality (acceptable level <2%), pathology and prevalence rate of P. sparis. According to our results the SA combination proved to be the most effective treatment against P. sparis infection in S. aurata: (i) the therapeutic scheme and commercial product used was not toxic and (ii) a significant reduction in percentage of prevalence was observed. [source] Feeding habits of the gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata) from the Ria Formosa (southern Portugal) as compared to the black seabream (Spondyliosoma cantharus) and the annular seabream (Diplodus annularis)JOURNAL OF APPLIED ICHTHYOLOGY, Issue 2 2002C. Pita The feeding habits of Sparus aurata L., Diplodus annularis L. and Spondyliosoma cantharus L. in the Ria Formosa (southern Portugal) lagoon system were studied using three simple methods (frequency of occurrence, numeric percentage and percentage weight) and a composite index [index of relative importance (IRI)]. The Ivlev index was used to evaluate diet selectivity, while the Schoener overlap index was used to compare diets, and diet diversity was characterized by the Simpson index. The diets of the three species consist of a wide variety of food organisms, nevertheless S. aurata seems to be the most specialized. No significant dietary overlap was found, with S. aurata preferentially selecting gastropods and bivalves, while S. cantharus preferentially selected a wide variety of crustaceans and D. sargus a wider array, including crustaceans, gastropods and bivalves. [source] Effects of a peroxide-based commercial product on bacterial load of larval rearing water and on larval survival of two species of Sparidae under intensive culture: preliminary studyAQUACULTURE RESEARCH, Issue 4 2009Gemma Giménez-Papiol Abstract Larvae of two Mediterranean Sparidae species, Sparus aurata and Dentex dentex, were used to test the efficacy of a peroxide-based product (Ox-Aquaculture©) on the reduction in bacterial load in larval rearing water and its effects on larval survival. Eleven-day-old S. aurata larvae and 15-day-old D. dentex larvae were exposed to different concentrations of Ox-Aquaculture© (50, 100 and 200 mg L,1, and 20 and 50 mg L,1 respectively) for 1 h. Results indicated that 50 and 20 mg L,1 were the most effective concentrations for the reduction in bacterial load (at least one order of magnitude) after 1 h treatment, without affecting larval survival and/or vitality in 11 dph S. aurata and 15 dph D. dentex larvae respectively. Ox-Aquaculture© concentrations of 200 and 50 mg L,1 during 1 h affected negatively final survival rate of the larvae of S. aurata and D. dentex respectively. [source] |