info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Thermal tolerance of Limnoperna fortunei to gradual temperature increase and its applications for biofouling control in industrial and power plants
Fecha
2011-07Registro en:
Perepelizin, Pablo Victor; Boltovskoy, Demetrio; Thermal tolerance of Limnoperna fortunei to gradual temperature increase and its applications for biofouling control in industrial and power plants; Taylor & Francis; Biofouling; 27; 6; 7-2011; 667-674
0892-7014
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Perepelizin, Pablo Victor
Boltovskoy, Demetrio
Resumen
The acute upper lethal temperature (AULT) at different rates of increase was evaluated as a tool for the design of cheaper and environmentally friendlier control strategies for the invasive bivalve Limnoperna fortunei. Survivorship of 6 ± 2 mm and 20 ± 2 mm mussels acclimated to 12, 23 and 28° and subjected to different heating rates (1° per 5, 15 and 30 min) was estimated in the laboratory. The temperatures required to kill 50% (LT50) and 100% (SM100) of the mussels, and the mean death temperature (MDT) varied between 42.2 and 51° over 54 experiments. Heating rates significantly (p < 0.001) affected LT50, SM100, and MDT. AULT was not affected by mussel size and acclimation temperatures. Limnoperna appears to be more resistant to high temperatures than Dreissena polymorpha, a mussel invasive in the USA and Europe. Lethal temperatures of L. fortunei are within the current thermal operational industrial capacities, suggesting that heat treatment is a viable alternative for controlling its fouling in utility systems.