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The effect of phytoplankton and suspended sediment on the growth of Corbicula fluminea (Bivalvia)
Authors:Christopher Foe  Allen Knight
Affiliation:(1) Land, Air and Water Resources, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, 95616, U.S.A.
Abstract:Juvenile Corbicula fluminea Müller (1774) were cultured at 15.3 °C in the laboratory on eight combinations of suspended sediment and phytoplankton. Sediment concentrations were 2.6, 25, 50, and 150 mg l–1. Chlorophyll a levels were 15.6 and 62.5 µg l–1. Clam tissue growth was found to be independent of silt concentration but increased at the higher chlorophyll level (p < 0.05). The growth experiment was repeated at 24 °C with chlorophyll a concentrations of 18.9 and 112.6 µg l–1. Growth was again greater at the higher phytoplankton level (p < 0.05). These results demonstrate that Asiatic clam populations are food-limited most of the growing season in the Northern and Western portions of California's eutrophic Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta where chlorophyll a levels average less than the lower of these values. Comparisons of clam growth in the laboratory and estuary support the food limitation hypothesis as at the higher food concentration laboratory tissue growth was 2.3 and 3.8 times greater during the high and low temperature evaluations than in the estuary.
Keywords:Corbicula  inorganic particle selection  food limitation  phytoplankton  growth  bivalvia
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