Aquatic Information Center

 

NRAC# 222

Evaluation of Artificial Diets for Cultured Fish

Michael A. Rice, David A. Bengtson and Carole Jaworski


Opening Paragraph:

One of the major expenses in any fish culture operation is the cost of feeds for the fish, and the profitability of many operations is frequently tied to the cost of feed. Hatchery production of fish larvae most often requires the expensive production of live food (phytoplankton and zooplankton), because artificial diets are either not available, or are grossly inadequate. Artificial diets are available for grow-out of fingerlings and adults of most cultured fish species, but they may be less than optimal because they had been formulated for another species. For example, in the United States, commercially formulated diets are available for catfish and salmonids, but these diets have been used without modification to feed other species of fish, including hybrid striped bass, tilapia, carps, and others. Less than optimum diets for grow-out of fingerlings will result in lowered growth rates and excessive waste, either by excessive fecal material, excessive urinary nitrogen, or uneaten food. Thus, less than optimum diets are not only wasteful in terms of money spent on feed, but they can cause increased waste management problems. The key challenge of producing production feeds is the maximization of fish growth with a minimization of waste.
Retrieve Full Article

 

Home - Contact Us

Copyright © 2003 BioFilter.Com. All rights reserved.
Aquaculture bio-filters and aquarium biofilters are biological filters. Fish farms and garden ponds use filters. Freshwater filters and saltwater filters use the same biological filters as biofiltration systems. Biofilters use bacteria to filter water. QuikSand filters are biological filters. Marine, reef, fresh, salt, tropical fish, bait, bass, catfish, coral, crawfish, koi, lobster, prawn, shrimp, trout and salmon all need water bio filters for biological filtration. BioFilter.Com is in Gainesville, Florida.