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New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts


M98040
Received 14 July 1998; accepted 6 July 2000

Size-specific clearance, excretion, and respiration rates, and phytoplankton selectivity for the mussel Perna canaliculus at low levels of natural food

M. R. JAMES

National Institute of Water & Atmospheric
 Research Ltd
P. O. Box 11 115
Hamilton, New Zealand
email: m.james@niwa.cri.nz

M. A. WEATHERHEAD
A. H. ROSS

National Institute of Water & Atmospheric
 Research Ltd
P. O. Box 8602
Christchurch, New Zealand

Abstract  Clearance, respiration, and ammonia excretion rates, and phytoplankton selectivity were measured for the GreenshellTM mussel Perna canaliculus (Gmelin) in Beatrix Bay, Marlborough Sounds, New Zealand. Functional equations were developed describing the relationship between body size (length and weight) and clearance and metabolic rates for this species feeding on natural food assemblages in New Zealand waters. Relationships with shell length were described by allometric power curves but the relationship with chlorophyll a concentrations in the water for a particular size of mussel suggested there was a threshold between 0.2 and 0.3 μg Chl. a litre-1 and an exponential decline in clearance rate from c. 0.5-0.6 μg Chl. a litre-1 with increasing chlorophyll concentrations. Under these field conditions ingestion rate would increase linearly with increasing chlorophyll concentrations up to c. 0.5 μg Chl. a litre-1 then remain constant at higher chlorophyll levels. Food levels, as measured by chlorophyll a or particulate carbon, were very low (generally <1 μg Chl. a litre-1 and 300 μg C litre-1) throughout the study and this was reflected in low ingestion rates, despite clearance rates of up to 8.6 litre mussel-1 h-1. P. canaliculus generally appears to be non-selective, at least for phytoplankton in the size range 5-100 μm, but there was some evidence that larger diatoms and dinoflagellates were cleared more efficiently by larger mussels. Some of our observations on food levels and feeding rates help explain the low mussel growth and condition experienced in the Pelorus Sound during 1996-97.

Keywords  clearance rate; Perna canaliculus; mussel; feeding behaviour; low food

New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 2001, Vol. 35: 73-86

0028-8330/01/3501-0073 $7.00 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand 2001

PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1027K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)


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