Phototrophic bacteria as feed supplement for rearing
Penaeus monodon larvae
S
Al Azad, C.V. Chong, S. Vikineswary-2002
Journal
of the World Aquaculture Society, 33(2): 158-168 (from Current Contents)
Abstract:
Larvae
of the giant tiger prawn Penaeus monodon were reared from the naupliar to
postlarval stage, based oil a diet of waste-grown phototrophic bacterium
Rhodovulum sulfidophilum, the marine diatom Skeletonema costatum, and brine
shrimp Artemia. The experimental design consisted of feeding the protozoea
with diatoms and varying proportions of bacterial biomass as diet D0 (0%),
D1 (1%), D2 (2%), D3 (3%), and D5 (5%), while mysis and postlarvae were fed
the above diet supplemented with Artemia nauplii. Controls were not fed with
bacteria biomass (diet DO). The addition of R. sulfidophilum biomass in the
diet had significant effects on the growth and survival of P monodon larvae.
In the first experiment, the larvae fed with diet D1 (Skeletonema + 1% R.
sulfidophilum) reached the first postlarval stage (PL1) on the ninth day of
feeding and had a mean total length (TL) of 6.13 +/- 0.05 mm, which was
significantly higher (P < 0.001) than TL of larvae fed with the other
three diets. In another experiment, prawn larvae fed with diet D2 had the
highest overall survival of 46% and a significantly larger mean TL of 6.88
+/- 0.18 mm at PL1 compared to larvae fed with diet D0 and D3 (P > 0.05).
However, in both experiments prawn larvae fed with the various diets showed
significant differences in their length-at-stage (P > 0.05), and the
lowest growth and survival were obtained from diets comprising 3% and 5%
bacterial biomass, which also gave the highest levels of ammonia-nitrogen in
the culture water. Addition of more than 2% R. sulfidophilum biomass
apparently deteriorates the quality of the culture water.
(Univ
Malaya; Inst Biol Sci; Kuala Lumpur 50603; Malaysia)