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Aquaculture International | 2011

Advances in precocity research of the Chinese mitten crab Eriocheir sinensis

Xian Li; Zhongjie Li; Jiashou Liu; Sena S. De Silva

Precocity has been observed in fishes and crustaceans. However, mechanisms underlying precocity have not been well documented in crustaceans and are thought to be influenced by both genetic and environmental factors. Also, precocity is generally considered to have negative effects on crustaceans. The Chinese mitten crab Eriocheir sinensis, a catadromous species endemic to China, is a high valued commodity and in the recent past is being extensively cultured to meet the growing demand by the restaurant trade. The mitten crab is an ideal candidate for precocity studies because of their large size, distinct secondary sex characters, wide distribution and abundant availability from commercial farms. In this article, progress in several aspects of precocity of E. sinensis is reviewed, including the phenomena of precocity and its effect, identification of precocious crabs, factors related to precocity (temperature, salinity, light, nutrition, stocking density, and germplasm), relationships between precocity and neuro-endocrine system, steroid hormones or hepatopancreas, prevention and control methods of precocity. In addition, possible future directions for the study of precocity are suggested.


Journal of Fish Diseases | 2012

First case of Aeromonas schubertii infection in the freshwater cultured snakehead fish, Ophiocephalus argus (Cantor), in China

Jiashou Liu; Aihua Li

An epizootic in snakehead fish, Ophiocephalus argus, in earthen ponds in Xianning, Hubei Province, central China, from June to August 2009 was found to be caused by Aeromonas schubertii. The cumulative mortality within 40 days was 45%, and the diseased fish were 18 months old and 35-45 cm in length. Multiple, ivory-white, firm nodules, 0.5-1 mm in diameter, were scattered throughout the kidney. Blood clots, 3-5 mm in diameter, were found in the liver. This is a disease frequently found in cultured snakehead throughout China. Isolated bacteria were Gram negative, facultatively anaerobic, motile, short rod-shaped, with a length of 0.3-1.0 μm. Morphological and biochemical tests, as well as phylogenetic analysis derived from 16S rRNA, gyrB, rpoD and dnaJ gene sequencing all strongly indicated that these snakehead isolates are identical to A. schubertii. In addition, the isolates possessed two plasmids: 5.0 kb and 10.0 kb. Antibiotic sensitivity testing of the isolates was carried out by the standard Kirby-Bauer disc diffusion method. Experimental infection assays were conducted, and pathogenicity (by intraperitoneal injection) was demonstrated in snakehead fingerlings and zebrafish, Brachydanio rerio (Hamilton).


Fundamental and Applied Limnology | 2012

Habitat segregation between two congeneric and introduced goby species

Zhiqiang Guo; Jiashou Liu; Sovan Lek; Zhongjie Li; Shaowen Ye; Fengyue Zhu; Jianfeng Tang; Julien Cucherousset

Spatial segregation is one of the most important mechanisms that facilitates coexistence among competing species. Large populations of two introduced and congeneric goby species (Rhinogobius giurinus and Rhinogobius cliffordpopei) now co-occur in Lake Erhai, a plateau lake in the Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau (China). Herein we quantified the spatio-temporal distribution of the two species to determine whether spatial segregation occurred within the same ecosystem. A total of 67,819 individuals of R. giurinus and 36,043 of R. cliffordpopei were sampled across four seasons. The results indicated that R. giurinus mostly occupied profundal habitat (PH) while R. cliffordpopei mainly used littoral habitat (LH). Correlation analysis revealed the abundance of R. giurinus was positively associated with deep water, silt and coarse sand substrata, whereas the distribution of R. cliffordpopei was positively associated with high densities of macrozooplanktons and high abundances of other fish species, high concentration of dissolved oxygen and high densities of submerged macrophytes. Except in spring, the body condition of R. giurinus was significantly higher in the PH than in the LH. The body condition of R. cliffordpopei did not differ significantly between habitats in the four seasons. These findings demonstrate that the two congeneric and introduced goby species occupy distinct habitats, indicating that spatial segregation enables coexistence of the two invasive species at high abundances within an ecosystem.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Maintaining Economic Value of Ecosystem Services Whilst Reducing Environmental Cost: A Way to Achieve Freshwater Restoration in China

Mingli Lin; Zhongjie Li; Jiashou Liu; Rodolphe Elie Gozlan; Sovan Lek; Tanglin Zhang; Shaowen Ye; Wei Li; Jing Yuan

Freshwater fisheries are central to food security in China and this remains one of the most important priorities for the growing human population. Thus, combining ecosystem restoration with economics is pivotal in setting successful conservation in China. Here, we have developed a practical management model that combines fishery improvement with conservation. For six years, a ban on fertilizer and a reduction of planktivorous fish stocking along with the introduction of both mandarin fish Siniperca chuatsi and Chinese mitten crab Eriocheir sinensis was apparent in Wuhu Lake, a highly eutrophic lake located in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River. Annual fish yield decreased slightly after the change in management, whereas fisheries income increased 2.6 times. Mandarin fish and Chinese mitten crab accounted for only 16% of total fisheries production but for 48% of total fisheries income. During this six year period, water clarity increased significantly from 61 cm to 111 cm. Total nitrogen, total phosphorus and chlorophyll decreased significantly from 1.14 to 0.84 mg/L, 0.077 to 0.045 mg/L, and 21.45 to 11.59 μg/L respectively, and macrophyte coverage increased by about 30%. Our results showed that the ecological status of shallow lakes could be rapidly reversed from eutrophic to oligotrophic using simple biomanipulation, whilst maintaining fisheries economic value. It also offers a better approach to shallow fisheries lake management in Asia where traditionally the stocking of Chinese carp and use of fertilizers is still popular.


Hydrobiologia | 2013

Comparative study of the reproductive biology of two congeneric and introduced goby species: implications for management strategies

Zhiqiang Guo; Julien Cucherousset; Sovan Lek; Zhongjie Li; Fengyue Zhu; Jianfeng Tang; Jiashou Liu

A full understanding of life history characteristics of invasive species is a fundamental prerequisite for the development of management strategies. Two introduced goby species (Rhinogobius cliffordpopei and Rhinogobius giurinus) have established highly abundant populations in Lake Erhai (China). In the present study, we examined the reproductive biology of these two species with the aim of improving the efficiency of management strategy. The results indicated that R. cliffordpopei spawned from February to June, whereas R. giurinus spawned from April to August. Rhinogobius cliffordpopei showed higher gonado-somatic indices and had larger eggs than R. giurinus. The adult sex ratio of R. cliffordpopei was female skewed, but that of R. giurinus was equal. Rhinogobius cliffordpopei showed a male-skewed sexual size dimorphism, whereas the body size of R. giurinus varied only slightly between males and females. The different reproductive traits appear as a crucial biologic aspect for developing control programs. Specifically, control measures should be implemented and/or intensified from September to February for R. cliffordpopei and from January to April for R. giurinus. The body size of the smaller R. cliffordpopei females is the determinant for minimal mesh size of the nets used in physical removals of R. cliffordpopei.


Archive | 2010

The Role of Exotics in Chinese Inland Aquaculture

Jiashou Liu; Zhongjie Li

China is not only the cradle of aquaculture, dating back to 2500 years ago, but in the context of modern aquaculture, it also leads global production. In China, inland aquaculture is the dominant component. However, with major socioeco-nomic changes that took place in the country since the beginning of the early 1980s, aquaculture has followed suite to meet consumer aspirations through a moderate shift into the culture of exotic species. The production of exotics increased from 780,000 tons in 1998 to 2.5 million tons in 2006, accounting for 5.9 and 11.7% of the total, respectively. Some exotic species have come to play an important role both in aquaculture production and economy, such as the channel catfish, tilapia, red swamp crayfish, sturgeons, and Pacific white shrimp. In a nutshell, the aquaculture production of exotics exceeds that of all continents other than Asia, emphasising the role of exotics in aquaculture in China.


Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2015

Co-occurring bighead and silver carps show similar food preference but different isotopic niche overlap in different lakes

U. Asanka D. Jayasinghe; Emili García-Berthou; Zhongjie Li; Wei Li; Tanglin Zhang; Jiashou Liu

Silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix) and bighead carp (Hypophthalmichthys nobilis) are among the most important fish species in aquaculture and have been introduced to many countries. The feeding ecology of these filter-feeding cyprinids is not well understood and has been mostly based on gut content analyses. We analyzed δ13C and δ15N stable isotope ratios of food resources and fish muscle tissues in four Chinese lakes, where these two species co-occur. Data analysis through Bayesian mixing models revealed that both fish species had similar diets within lakes, and where dietary shifts occurred, both species displayed dietary shifts simultaneously. Diet was generally based on plankton, however, detritus was the main food in eutrophic lake subjected to urban pollution, likely due to resource availability. Niche overlap and width were also variable but in general clear size-based resource partitioning was observed, with bighead carp preying more on zooplankton and occupying a higher trophic position and silver carp feeding more on phytoplankton. Food particles smaller than 64 μm, had little importance in their diets.


Aquatic Ecology | 2015

Analyzing the importance of top-down and bottom-up controls in food webs of Chinese lakes through structural equation modeling

Xue Du; Emili García-Berthou; Qidong Wang; Jiashou Liu; Tanglin Zhang; Zhongjie Li

Zooplankton is generally affected by both top-down and bottom-up regulations in aquatic ecosystems. However, the relative strength of top-down and bottom-up controls on zooplankton assemblages is not well understood. Here, we analyzed this question in five lakes of the Yangtze River basin, an area with high population density and thousands of lakes, many of them suffering multiple environmental pressures. We sampled the whole communities of five lakes in the middle reaches of Yangtze River basin from 2006 to 2011 and used structural equation modeling to evaluate the relative importance of joint top-down and bottom-up effects. With increasing total phosphorous (TP), a major shift occurred in trophic structure. Biomass of phytoplankton, rotifers, cyclopoids, and planktivorous fish significantly increased, while cladocerans and calanoids were negatively correlated with increasing TP. The bottom-up effects were strongest at the bottom of the food web (e.g., effects of TP on phytoplankton). Direct bottom-up effects of phytoplankton and other food resources (latent variable) on rotifers and cyclopoids were greater than top-down controls from planktivores. The predation pressure on crustacean zooplankton by planktivores was higher than that on rotifers. In planktivore-dominated systems, piscivores only played a marginal role, whereas they seem affected by water quality. These results suggest not only in the food web processes the important role of nutrient pollution in affecting the top of the food web in these lakes, but also that the impacts and relative strength of bottom-up and top-down controls may vary with zooplankton assemblages, indicating the complexity of food webs in degraded lakes in China.


Ichthyological Research | 2014

Assessing fish distribution and threats to fish biodiversity in the Yangtze River Basin, China

Shaowen Ye; Zhongjie Li; Tanglin Zhang; Jiashou Liu; Songguang Xie

The Yangtze River (6,380 km long) is the longest river inAsia and the third-longest one in the world. Its river basin(a complex riverine–lacustrine network) is especially richin fish fauna, representing high species richness andendemism, and therefore is a globally significant area forpreserving fish biodiversity (Dudgeon 2000; Park et al.2003). However, during the past several decades, loss offish biodiversity in the Yangtze River Basin has beenaccelerated by a series of direct and indirect effects ofhuman activities and environmental changes, e.g., disap-pearance, shrinkage, and fragmentation of habitats for fishspawning, feeding and migration, overfishing, water pol-lution, and invasion of exotic species (Zeng 1990; Xie andChen 1999). Despite numerous publications on ichthyo-logical research in the Yangtze River Basin since the1950s, synthesis and analysis or assessment of fish distri-bution patterns and quantification of major threats to fishesare still limited, which in turn limits formulation of bio-diversity conservation strategies. In this study, we collectedand synthesized the scattered data from relevant literature,with the purposes of (1) assessing large-scale distributionand endemic species composition of Yangtze fishes, (2)ranking the contribution of major threats as well as intrinsicfactors to fish endangerment, and (3) providing recom-mendations for fish conservation in the basin.The Yangtze River Basin consists of five defined areas(Fig. 1). The riverhead is located on the Tibetan Plateau,where the mean elevation is over 4,500 m (Zeng 1990).The upper reach extends upstream from Yichang (in HubeiProvince), with a length of more than 4,300 km and adrainage basin area of 100 9 10


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2017

Paradigm changes in freshwater aquaculture practices in China: Moving towards achieving environmental integrity and sustainability

Qidong Wang; Zhongjie Li; Jian-Fang Gui; Jiashou Liu; Shaowen Ye; Jing Yuan; Sena S. De Silva

Contribution of fisheries and aquaculture to global food security is linked to increased fish consumption. Projections indicate that an additional 30–40 million tonnes of fish will be required by 2030. China leads global aquaculture production accounting for 60% in volume and 45% in value. Many changes in the Chinese aquaculture sector are occurring to strive towards attaining environmental integrity and prudent use of resources. We focus on changes introduced in freshwater aquaculture developments in China, the main source of food fish supplies. We bring forth evidence in support of the contention that Chinese freshwater aquaculture sector has introduced major paradigm changes such as prohibition of fertilisation in large water bodies, introduction of stringent standards on nutrients in effluent and encouragement of practices that strip nutrients among others, which will facilitate long-term sustainability of the sector.

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Zhongjie Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Tanglin Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shaowen Ye

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qidong Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wei Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jing Yuan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhiqiang Guo

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Songguang Xie

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Fengyue Zhu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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