Partial replacement of Artemia sp. by the brackishwater cladoceran, Diaphanosoma celebensis (Stingelin), in the larval rearing of sea bass, Lates calcarifer (Bloch)
- Global styles
- MLA
- Vancouver
- Elsevier - Harvard
- APA
- Help
閲覧/開く
日付
1998Page views
1,388ASFA keyword
AGROVOC keyword
Taxonomic term
Metadata
アイテムの詳細レコードを表示する
Share
抄録
A feed experiment was conducted to test the brackishwater cladoceran, Diaphanosoma celebensis, as a partial or complete substitute for Artemia in the larval rearing of the sea bass, Lates calcarifer. The cladoceran was fed either alone or in combination with Artemia to 15-day old sea bass larvae (5.6 mm SL, 2.7 mg wet BW) reared at 15 ppt salinity. Groups fed Artemia alone were reared at 15 and 32 ppt salinity levels. After 15 days of rearing, the survival (95-99%), observed mortality (0.8-1.2%) and apparent loss due to cannibalism (0.2-4.1%) did not differ significantly among treatments. The specific growth rates of fish fed only Artemia (18.7-19.1%/day) and combined Artemia+Diaphanosoma (18.7%/day) were significantly higher than that of fish fed only Diaphanosoma (16.3%/day). Diaphanosoma had higher crude protein and crude fat contents than Artemia but the percentage of n-3 highly unsaturated fatty acids, particularly 20:5n3 and 22:6n3, was lower than in Artermia. Results indicated the potential of Diaphanosoma as a partial substitute for Artemia in the larval rearing of sea bass at 15 ppt salinity.
Suggested Citation
de la Peña, M. R., Fermin, A. C., & Lojera, D. P. (1998). Partial replacement of Artemia sp. by the brackishwater cladoceran, Diaphanosoma celebensis (Stingelin), in the larval rearing of sea bass, Lates calcarifer (Bloch). The Israeli Journal of Aquaculture-Bamidgeh , 50(1), 25-32. http://hdl.handle.net/10862/1738
Type
ArticleISSN
0792-156XCollections
- Journal Articles [1215]
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Aquaculture in the Philippines
Aypa, Simeona M. (Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 1995)Aquaculture is regarded as the most promising source of protein food in the years ahead. Milkfish and Nile tilapia are the major fishes now produced but groupers, sea bass, rabbitfish, red snappers, carps, and catfishes ... -
Sea bass culture
Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, Aquaculture Department (Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 2017)The brochure contains information on the culture of sea bass from the hatchery, nursery and grow-out phases. -
The culture of seabass
Aldon, E. T. (Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 1997)Seabass (Lates calcarifer) are raised in ponds and cages in Southeast Asia. Details are given of the 2 phases involved in the pond and culture culture systems -- nursery and grow-out. Both monoculture and polyculture systems ...