FEEDING LARVAE OF WINTER FLOUNDER PSEUDOPLEURONECTES AMERICANUS (WALBAUM) WITH LIVE PREY OR MICROENCAPSULATED DIET: LINEAR GROWTH AND PROTEIN, RNA AND DNA CONTENT


I.B. Khemis, J. de la Noue, C. Audet-2000

Aquaculture Research, 31 (4): 377-386

Abstract:

A commercial microencapsulated diet was used as a total or partial replacement of live prey for feeding larvae of winter flounder Pseudopleuronectes americanus (Walbaum), a potential alternative finfish species for coldwater marine aquaculture. Growth performance (morphometric measurements and biochemical composition) and nutritional condition (RNA/DNA ratios) of larvae fed live prey (Brachionus plicatilis Müller) a microencapsulated diet or a mixed diet of live prey and microcapsules were compared. Newly hatched larvae were unable to digest microencapsulated diet; live prey at initial feeding was required for their survival and growth.

Larvae offered a mixed diet showed slower growth than larvae fed exclusively with live prey. However, at the onset of stomach differentiation, RNA/DNA ratios (indicators of protein synthesis potential) of the larvae fed both diets became similar. We suggest that, at that stage (size 5.5-6.3 mm), enzymatic activity had developed enough to allow digestion of inert food. As the RNA/DNA ratio is a good indicator of nutritional condition, it appears to be an interesting tool for the assessment of diet adequacy in marine larval feeding technology.

(Institut des Sciences de la Mer de Rimouski (ISMER), Université du Québec à Rimouski, 310 allée des Ursulines, Rimouski (QC), Canada G5L 3A1)

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