HEMOLYMPH CHEMISTRY OF TROPICAL ROCK LOBSTERS (PANULIRUS-ORNATUS) BROUGHT ONTO A MOTHER SHIP FROM A CATCHING DINGHY IN TORRES STRAIT

Citation
Bd. Paterson et al., HEMOLYMPH CHEMISTRY OF TROPICAL ROCK LOBSTERS (PANULIRUS-ORNATUS) BROUGHT ONTO A MOTHER SHIP FROM A CATCHING DINGHY IN TORRES STRAIT, Marine and freshwater research, 48(8), 1997, pp. 835-838
Citations number
24
ISSN journal
13231650
Volume
48
Issue
8
Year of publication
1997
Pages
835 - 838
Database
ISI
SICI code
1323-1650(1997)48:8<835:HCOTRL>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
For export of live Panulirus ornatus from northern Queensland, divers catch the lobsters by hand and keep them in small tanks on dinghies be fore draining the tanks and returning at speed to a mother ship that h as a larger storage tank. The lobsters are sometimes too weak for expo rt. The physiological state of lobsters stored in a tank on the mother ship was studied by measuring the concentrations of L-lactate, D-gluc ose and ammonia in the haemolymph. Oxygen levels in the dinghy tanks w ere normally acceptable but fell rapidly below 50% saturation when flo w was stopped and the tank was draining. The concentration of lactate in the haemolymph of lobsters arriving from the dinghy was 16.4 +/- 5. 7 mmol L-1 (mean +/- s.d.n = 9); this fell during storage on the mothe r ship. On the mother ship, serum concentrations of calcium, potassium and magnesium ions all increased, haemolymph glucose concentration in creased slightly and then decreased, and ammonia concentration did not change. Future work may identify which aspects of prior handling are responsible for the elevated lactate concentrations in captive lobster s, but improvements could be made meanwhile to water flow through the dinghy tanks.