Project number: 2002-206
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $30,000.00
Principal Investigator: Mike Heasman
Organisation: NSW Department of Primary Industries
Project start/end date: 19 Oct 2002 - 1 Jan 2004
Contact:
FRDC

Need

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Objectives

1. To examine causes of mortality in oyster larvae and spat in hatcheries in NSW, other states and overseas.
2. To critically review procedures at the PSFC mollusc hatchery that might cause or contribute to Sydney rock oyster larval and spat mortality.
3. To assess the likelihood that strategic research can identify the problems casing mortality or develop processed to avoid it.
4. Depending on 3 above, to draft the objectives and methods for a three year research project aimed at solving hatchery mortality of Sydney rock oyster larvae and spat.
5. To recommend changes to current practices.

Final report

Author: Mike Heasman
Final Report • 2017-09-29 • 2.79 MB
2002-206-DLD.pdf

Summary

Mass of mortality over the past decade in routine mass hatchery and nursery rearing to produce the millions of spat required for commercial operation. These same problems have also forced the abandonment of SRO production operations by several commercial hatcheries elsewhere in NSW. three complementary strategies have been developed and major resources marshaled, first strategy implement relatively simple but potentially significant modifications to existing bivalve hatchery facilities, rearing equipment and operating protocols at PSFC. The second strategy is assessing whether or not ‘in-house factors’ at PSFC, namely site and facility design and operational constraints (especially inherent plumbing design faults and hygiene constraints imposed by year-round competing demands for limited hatchery resources), have been responsible for variable and generally poor hatchery production of SRO spat. The third strategy, a 3-year program of systematic experimental investigation has been designed to optimize a wide spectrum of husbandry factors,
particularly those identified as of high probable significance during the course by an international health workshop that in August 2002. The program is also geared to ‘fast-track’ commercialization of SRO breeding program with the first large scale production run to be attempted in Sept/Oct 2003. A priority objective is rapid assessment of alternative settlement and spat rearing technologies, including use of spat bubblers and estuary-based field nursery systems, to promote fastest possible growth of spat to a size of 2 mm beyond which they appear to overcome susceptibility to the mass mortality syndrome. A critical outcome of the program will be to ensure the portability of improved commercial production technology developed.

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