Assessing The Food Habits Of Crassostrea Tulipa (L. 1819) In A Commercial Fishery Of A Ramsar Site In Ghana
Date
2023
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
West African Journal of Applied Ecology
Abstract
The development of wild commercial oyster culture in Ghana is of recent concern. Reduction in feed cost
Reliance on natural feed sources is an important sustainable aquaculture management strategy. In
In many parts of sub-Saharan African countries, including Ghana, there is limited documented information on
the natural food items fed on by Crassostrea tulipa (Lamarck, 1819). The oyster in the Densu estuary was
studied for food habits using the Numerical, Frequency of Occurrence, and Index of Relative Importance
(IRI) methods and condition index for a duration of 18 months.The diet of the oyster was dominated by
golden algae (Phylum Ochrophyta; IRI=595), red algae (Phylum Rhodophyta; IRI=209), green algae (Phylum
Chlorophyta; IRI = 131.37) and diatoms (Phylum Bacillariophyta; IRI =172). There was a high species
diversity (D = 6.60 ± 0.10 - 7.01 ± 0.03; H '= 0.30 ± 0.12 - 0.32 ± 0.05) among the food items ingested by C.
tulipa. Golden algae was the most abundant (IRI= 56%), followed by red algae (IRI = 16%) and the diatoms
(IRI = 13%). The less abundant phyla were Chlorophyta (IRI= 8 %), Cynophyta (IRI = 6 %) and Arthropoda
(IRI = 1%). The oyster was in a good state of wellbeing (Mean Condition index = 139.50 ± 0.11) and fed
on a wide range of plankton species. This information is essential in the development of natural feed for the
oyster industry in Densu estuary. The presence of green algae in the diet requires further investigation to help
minimize the possible toxic effects it may have on the fishery and humans.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Aquaculture, Algae, Filter feeder