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OI Team Reports Good News On Raising Tang

Scientists at Oceanic Institute in Waimanalo have announced a breakthrough that could be good news for both the aquarium industry and for Hawaii’s coral reefs.

Principal researcher Chatham Callan, a Kailua resident, said that since 2001 they have developed breeding techniques that improve prospects for raising the eggs of the sought-after yellow tang via aquaculture settings. And more recently, Callan and his team in OI’s finfish department have found a way to boost Zebrasoma flavescens‘ survival rate past a critical growth period.

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Oceanic Institute has been making 'significant breakthroughs' in rearing and feeding technology for the yellow tang ('Zebrasoma flavescens'), which could impact both the aquarium trade and reef protection measures in the future. Photo from Oceanic Institute.

“We’ve developed rearing methods for both the larvae and their prey, enabling them to eat and survive through the critical first-feeding stage, which up until now has not been achieved,” he explained. The findings are published in Global Aquaculture Advocate‘s January-February 2013 edition.

According to Callan, more than 300,000 of the vivid yellow, arrow-shaped tang are collected in the wild and exported from Hawaii each year for the aquarium trade. If they can be bred successfully in-house, that helps conserve the reefs.

“We’ve improved radically, not only in total eggs, but also quality of eggs,”

Callan said. The article reports that OI has gone from producing no viable eggs to a monthly yield of 1 million, a mean fertility rate of 84 percent and an egg viability rate of 51 percent.

Other team members working on yellow tang culture technology are Kailua resident Charles Laidley of Waikiki Aquarium, and Callan’s OI colleagues Michael Dean Kline of Kaneohe, Melissa Rietfors of Waimanalo and Eric Martinson.

Located next to Sea Life Park, Oceanic Institute is a research and teaching affiliate of Hawaii Pacific University.