Effect of broodstock nutrition on reproductive performance of fish
M.S.
Izquierdo, H. Fernández-Palacios, A.G.J. Tacon-2001
Aquaculture, 197 (1-4):
25-42
(Reproductive Biotechnology in Finfish
Aquaculture
Oceanic Institute, Hawaii, USA, 4 - 7 October 1999
Edited by C.-S. Lee, E. Donaldson and N. Bromage)
Abstract:
In
many cultured fish species, particularly in those new for aquaculture,
unpredictable and variable reproductive performance is an important limiting
factor for the successful mass production of juveniles. An improvement in
broodstock nutrition and feeding has been shown to greatly improve not only
egg and sperm quality but also seed production. Gonadal development and
fecundity are affected by certain essential dietary nutrients, especially in
continuous spawners with short vitellogenic periods. Thus, during the last
two decades, more attention has been paid to the level of different
nutrients in broodstock diets. However, studies on broodstock nutrition are
limited and relatively expensive to conduct.
Lipid
and fatty acid composition of broodstock diet have been identified as major
dietary factors that determine successful reproduction and survival of
offspring. Some fish species readily incorporate dietary unsaturated fatty
acids into eggs, even during the course of the spawning season. Highly
unsaturated fatty acids (HUFA) with 20 or more carbon atoms affect, directly
or through their metabolites, fish maturation and steroidogenesis. In some
species, HUFA in broodstock diets increases fecundity, fertilization and egg
quality. As in higher vertebrates, vitamin E deficiency affects reproductive
performance, causing immature gonads and lower hatching rate and survival of
offspring. For example, elevation of dietary α-tocopherol levels has
been found to reduce the percentage of abnormal eggs and increase fecundity
in the gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata). Ascorbic acid has also been
shown to play an important role in salmonid reproduction, where the dietary
requirement of broodstock was higher than that of juveniles. Among different
feed ingredients, cuttlefish, squid and krill meals are recognized as
valuable components of broodstock diets. The protein component of cuttlefish
and squid together with their optimal concentration of HUFA appear to be
responsible for their positive effect on reproductive performance. Both
polar and nonpolar lipid fractions of raw krill were found to effectively
improve egg quality.
(GIA,
Grupo de Investigación en Acuicultura, P.O. Box 56, 35200 Telde, Las
Palmas, Canary Islands, Spain)