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Growth and survival of three small abalone<i>Haliotis diversicolor</i>populations and their reciprocal crosses
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Citations
19
References
2009
Year
EngineeringAquaculture SystemAquaculture IndustryMaricultureAquatic Food SystemMolecular EcologyAquacultureMarine BiodiversityEnvironmentally Sustainable AquacultureConservation BiologyAquacultural EngineeringBiodiversityAquacultural SystemsAquaculture GeneticsFish FarmingPopulation GeneticsReciprocal Cross LinesBiologyCross BreedingReciprocal CrossesEvolutionary BiologyPopulation DevelopmentAquatic OrganismMedicine
The aquaculture industry of small abalone Haliotis diversicolor in southern China is now close to collapse because of high mortality at the grow-out stage. To examine if survival and growth (shell length increase) could be improved by cross breeding among populations, a 3 × 3 complete diallel cross was conducted among three populations from Japan (A), Taiwan (B) and Vietnam (C). Performances in growth rate and survival at early juvenile, later juvenile and grow-out stages were compared among the six reciprocal cross lines and three parental lines. Magnitude of heterosis for survival and growth varied among cross lines in the three growing stages. As to mid-parent heterosis, HAB was significantly (P<0.01) higher than HAC and HBC at all three growing stages for both growth and survival, and all mid-parent heterosis fell between the two corresponding single-parent heterosis. HAB was 6.84% for shell length and 69.09% for survival at Day 420. Our results of high survival heterosis in line AB and line BA show that crossbreeding between different populations can benefit the small abalone breeding programs and the industry.
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