SEAFDEC/AQDINSTITUTIONAL REPOSITORY
    • English
    • 日本語
    • ไทย
    • Bahasa Indonesia
  • ไทย 
    • English
    • 日本語
    • ไทย
    • Bahasa Indonesia
  • เข้าสู่ระบบ
ดูรายการ 
  •   SAIR บ้าน
  • 03 SEAFDEC/AQD External Publications
  • Journal Articles, Conference Papers and Book Chapters by SEAFDEC Staff
  • Journal Articles
  • ดูรายการ
  •   SAIR บ้าน
  • 03 SEAFDEC/AQD External Publications
  • Journal Articles, Conference Papers and Book Chapters by SEAFDEC Staff
  • Journal Articles
  • ดูรายการ
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Effect of dietary protein to energy ratios on growth, survival, and body composition of juvenile Asian seabass, Lates calcarifer

  • Global styles
  • MLA
  • Vancouver
  • Elsevier - Harvard
  • APA
  • Help
Thumbnail
ดู/เปิด
วันที่
1995
ผู้เขียน
Catacutan, Mae R.
Coloso, Relicardo M.
Page views
4,658
ASFA keyword
bioenergetics ASFA
body condition ASFA
diet ASFA
fish physiology ASFA
growth ASFA
lipids ASFA
proteins ASFA
survival ASFA
AGROVOC keyword
sea bass AGROVOC
Lates calcarifer AGROVOC
Protein/energy ratio
Growth-fish
Protein-sparing
Taxonomic term
Lates calcarifer GBIF
เมตาดาต้า
แสดงระเบียนรายการเต็ม


Share 
 
นามธรรม
The optimum protein-to-energy (P/E) ratio for juvenile sea bass (body weight, 1.34 ± 0.01 g) was determined using practical diets in a 3 × 3 factorial experiment. Three protein levels (35, 42.5 or 50%) and three lipid levels (5, 10 or 15%) at a fixed carbohydrate level of 20% were tested. P/E ratios of the diets ranged from 104 to 157 mg protein/kcal. The fish were reared for 54 days in 60-liter flow-through tanks with seawater at 32 p.p.t. and 29 °C. Fish fed the diet containing 50% protein and 15% lipid (P/E ratio of 125 mg/kcal) showed the highest weight gain and specific growth rate. Those fed the diet with 42.5% protein and 10% lipid (P/E ratio of 128 mg/kcal) showed comparable growth rate and significantly better condition factor, protein efficiency ratio and apparent protein retention. Fish given diets containing 35% protein showed the poorest growth. Those fed diets with 5% lipid regardless of the protein content showed abnormal reddening of the fins, indicating essential fatty acid deficiency. Body fat increased with fat content of the diet and was inversely related to moisture. Fish given the diet containing 35% protein and 5% fat had the lowest body fat content and the highest ash and water content. The diet containing 42.5% protein and 10% lipid with P/E ratio of 128 mg protein/kcal was found to be optimum for juvenile seabass under the experimental conditions used in the study.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10862/1474
การอ้างอิง
Catacutan, M. R., & Coloso, R. M. (1995). Effect of dietary protein to energy ratios on growth, survival, and body composition of juvenile Asian seabass, Lates calcarifer. Aquaculture, 131(1-2), 125-133. https://doi.org/10.1016/0044-8486(94)00358-U 
DOI
10.1016/0044-8486(94)00358-U
Type
Article
ISSN
0044-8486
คอลเลกชัน
  • Journal Articles [1267]

Related items

Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.

  • Thumbnail

    Sulphur amino acid requirement of juvenile Asian sea bass Lates calcarifer 

    Coloso, Relicardo M.; Murillo-Gurrea, D.P.; Borlongan, Ilda G.; Catacutan, Mae R. (John Wiley and Sons, 1999)
    The dietary requirement of juvenile Asian sea bass Lates calcarifer for total sulphur amino acids was studied. Fish (average initial weight of 2.59 plus or minus 0.08 g) were reared in twelve 500 L fibreglass tanks provided with flow-through seawater at 26 degree C and salinity of 31 ppt for 12 weeks. They were fed semipurified test diets containing 6.2, 7.2, 8.1, 9.0, 10.8, or 12.6 g methionine/kg dry diet and a basal level of 3.1 g cystine/kg dry diet. The mean crude protein of the diets (containing defatted Peruvian fishmeal, squid meal, soybean meal, and free amino acid mixture to simulate the pattern of hydrolysed sea bass protein) was 46.02 %. The crude fat content of the diets was 10.51 % from a 1:1 mixture of cod liver oil and soybean oil. Survival was 100 % in all treatments. On the basis of the growth response, the total sulphur amino acid requirement of juvenile Asian sea bass was estimated to be 13.4 g/kg dry diet (2.9 % of protein). Fish fed low levels of L-methionine had significantly lower weight gains and feed efficiency ratios as well as slightly higher hepatosomatic indices. No nutritional deficiency signs were observed other than growth depression in fish fed on diets that were low in methionine. This information is valuable in further refinement of formulations of practical diets for the Asian sea bass.
  • Thumbnail

    Tryptophan requirement of juvenile Asian sea bass Lates calcarifer 

    Coloso, R. M.; Murillo-Gurrea, D. P.; Borlongan, I. G.; Catacutan, M. R. (Blackwell Publishing, 2004)
    The dietary requirement of tryptophan for juvenile Asian sea bass (Lates calcarifer Bloch) was studied. The juveniles (mean initial weight, 5.30 ± 0.06 g) were given semi-purified test diets containing fish meal, gelatin, squid meal, and crystalline amino acids, for 12 weeks. Each set of isonitrogenous and isocaloric test diets contained graded levels of tryptophan. Fish (15 per tank) were reared in 250-L fiberglass tanks provided with continuous flow-through sea water at 26°C and salinity of 28 p.p.t. Fish were fed twice daily at a feeding rate of 8% of the body weight day−1 for the first 4 weeks and at 3.5–2.5% of the body weight day−1 from 5 to 12 weeks. The experiment was in a completely randomized design with two replicates per treatment. Mean percentage weight gains and feed efficiency ratios were significantly different in fish fed varying tryptophan levels. Survival was 100% in all treatments. On the basis of break-point analysis of the growth response, the dietary tryptophan requirement of juvenile Asian sea bass is 0.41% of the dietary protein. This information will be useful in further refinement of practical feed formulations for the Asian sea bass.
  • Thumbnail

    Use of plant protein sources in aquafeed for high value marine species in ASEAN member states 

    Catacutan, Mae R. (Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 2015)
    Cultured marine aquatic species are predominantly carnivorous. Major species in the region are seabass, grouper, snapper, tiger shrimp, mangrove crab and abalone. These species, except for abalone, require a high level of dietary protein mostly supplied by marine sources such as fish meal. Global production of marine fish and marine shrimps showed a 3-4 fold increase from 1995 to 2010. For the same period, the usage of commercial feed for production of marine fish and shrimps increased while the fish meal portion in the formulation decreased. This is indicative of fish meal being substituted with alternative sources in commercial feed production, and to some extent the substitution of marine oil which particularly improved the FCR for the marine fish production from 2.0 to 1.9 and for marine shrimps from 2.0 to 1.6. Plant products that include cereal grains, legumes and oilseeds have the most potential among the alternative ingredients for use in aquafeed. The use of these resources for high value marine species is limited due to a variety of anti-nutritional substances they contain. Removal of these substances by processing techniques has improved utilization but with added cost. Hence, fish meal is still the primary source of protein for marine carnivores and its substitution with higher amounts of alternative plant proteins may be difficult compared with lower levels of replacements. The Asian region has accounted for the more than 50% of the total global aquaculture production in 2012 with indications of increased utilization of alternative protein sources in commercial feed production. For the major marine species in the region the increasing trend of plant protein usage with the targeted levels of substitution of fish meal with plant protein sources should be sustainable.

© SEAFDEC/AQD  2026
ส่งความคิดเห็น | Subscribe
 

 

หมวด

ทั้งหมดของ SAIRชุมชนและคอลเล็กชันตามวันที่ออกผู้เขียนชื่อเรื่องอาสาสมัครคอลเลกชันนี้ตามวันที่ออกผู้เขียนชื่อเรื่องอาสาสมัคร

บัญชีของฉัน

เข้าสู่ระบบRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

© SEAFDEC/AQD  2026
ส่งความคิดเห็น | Subscribe
 

 

Export citations

Export the current results of the search query as a citation list. Select one of the available citation styles, or add a new one using the "Citations format" option present in the "My account" section.

The list of citations that can be exported is limited to items.

Export citations

Export the current item as a citation. Select one of the available citation styles, or add a new one using the "Citations format" option present in the "My account" section.

Export Citations

DOCUMENT REQUEST NOT AVAILABLE

This publication is still available (in PRINT) and for sale at AQD bookstore. The library is currently restricted to send PDF of publications that are still for sale.

You may contact bookstore@seafdec.org.ph or visit AQD bookstore for orders.

FILE UNDER EMBARGO

This file associated with this publication is currently under embargo. This will be available for download after the embargo date.