Artigo Acesso aberto Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Minimum water exchange spares the requirement for dietary methionine for juvenile Litopenaeus vannamei reared under intensive outdoor conditions

2018; Wiley; Volume: 49; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/are.13624

ISSN

1365-2109

Autores

Felipe Nobre Façanha, Hassan Sabry‐Neto, Cláudia Figueiredo-Silva, Adhemar Rodrigues de Oliveira Neto, Alberto Jorge Pinto Nunes,

Tópico(s)

Aquatic life and conservation

Resumo

We examined if minimum water exchange could spare dietary methionine (Met) required for maximum growth performance of juvenile Litopenaeus vannamei reared in an intensive outdoor system. Shrimp of 1.98 ± 0.13 g were stocked at 70 animals/m2 and reared for 72 days in 50 tanks of 1 m3 under flow-through (14.4% a day) and static (1.4%–2.9% a day) green-water conditions at 32.0 ± 3.7 g/L salinity. Five diets with a minimum inclusion of fishmeal supplemented with a dipeptide, dl-methionyl-dl-methionine, were formulated to contain increasing levels of Met, 4.8, 6.2, 7.2, 8.1 or 9.4 g/kg (on a dry matter basis). Each of the five diets were fed four times daily to five replicate groups. Dietary Met and water exchange significantly influenced shrimp survival, gained yield, apparent feed intake, food conversion ratio and final body weight (p < .05). Raising shrimp under limited water exchange, i.e., static versus flow-through spared the dependence on higher levels of dietary Met to maximize shrimp body weight, from 9.4 g/kg to 8.0 g/kg (14.0 and 12.6 g/kg Met+Cys respectively). In an intensive rearing system, a reduction in water exchange is desirable as it leads to a lower need for supplemental dietary Met.

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