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Feeding behaviour of adult tiger prawns, Penaeus esculentus, under laboratory conditions
Hill, B.J.; Wassenberg, T.J. (1987). Feeding behaviour of adult tiger prawns, Penaeus esculentus, under laboratory conditions, in: Hill, B.J. Biology of penaeid prawns in northern Australia. pp. 183-190
In: Hill, B.J. (1987). Biology of penaeid prawns in northern Australia. CSIRO Australia: Melbourne. ISBN 0-643-04254-7. 190 pp., meer

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  • Hill, B.J.
  • Wassenberg, T.J.

Abstract
    Adult tiger prawns, P. esculentus, when offered a choice of food, showed significant preferences. They preferred feeding on tissue from the prawn Metapenaeus bennettae to tissue from the bivalve Perna canaliculus but preferred P. canaliculus to the prawn Penaeus longistylus. When given a choice of two bivalves, they preferred Donax deltoides to Perna canaliculus. Prawns preferred fresh food to food that had been soaked for several hours. If food was given only at dusk, feeding occurred mainly in the first half of the night. If additional fresh food was given at midnight, then an equal amount of feeding occurred after midnight. The prawns spent short periods (mean 9.3 min) at the food. These were separated by non-feeding intervals with a mean length of 42 min. This behaviour was repeated about six times each night. Tiger prawns filled their foreguts to about 60% of capacity within 10 min of beginning feeding and could clear about 50% of the content in 30 min and nearly 75% in 60 min. Females and males spent the same amount of time feeding. When starved, P. esculentus emerged from the substrate for longer periods at night, moved around more, and emerged during the day.

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