Document généré le 11/06/2026 depuis l'adresse: https://www.documentation.eauetbiodiversite.fr/fr/notice/intensive-rearing-of-juvenile-oysters
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Titre alternatif
Producteur
Contributeur(s)
Éditeur(s)
EDP Sciences
Identifiant documentaire
10-1992009
Identifiant OAI
oai:edpsciences.org:dkey/10.1051/alr:1992009
Auteur(s):
Cédric Bacher,Jean-Pierre Baud
Mots clés
economic efficiency
multidimensional contingency table analysis
correspondence analysis
growth
nursery
rentabilité
économique
table de contingence multidimensionnelle
analyse des correspondances
croissance
nourricerie
Date de publication
15/04/1992
Date de création
Date de modification
Date d'acceptation du document
Date de dépôt légal
Langue
en
Thème
Type de ressource
Source
https://doi.org/10.1051/alr:1992009
Droits de réutilisation
Région
Département
Commune
Description
Seasonal growth of juvenile oysters (Crassostrea gigas) kept in an intensive upwelling system was studied from 1984 to 1986 in 60 to 90-day growth experiments. Saline ground
water was used to produce Skeletonema costatum which was injected as food into the water supplying the upwelling system. Oyster density, water flow, phytoplankton concentration, temperature and frequency of food addition were controlled. Oyster growth was analysed with multidimensional
contingency tables and correspondence analysis. The factors, in order of decreasing influence on
growth, were temperature, food concentration and oyster density. A rearing strategy was deduced from the growth analysis for summer and winter. In summer, the density of 120,000 oysters/m2, the flow rate of 1 liter/d/oyster and the food concentration of 0.5 × 109 phytoplankton cells/litre gave the most interesting results. The oysters grew from 0.014 g to 2.2 g after 60 days. In winter, the heat
exchanger was necessary to increase the temperature from the 5 °C naturally observed to the 11 °C required for valuable growth. Oyster density and food concentration were the same as in summer. For a flow rate equal to 3 liter/day/oyster, oysters grew from 0.01 g to 0.5 g within
100 days. The cost and profit computations were derived from these strategies. It was concluded that this type of nursery would be profitable in spring, summer, and autumn but not in winter due to the high cost of heating the water.
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