Effects of supplementation of coated crystalline amino acids on
growth performance and body composition of juvenile kuruma shrimp
Marsupenaeus japonicus
M.S.
Alam, S. Teshima, S. Koshio, M. Ishikawa-2004
Aquaculture
Nutrition, 10(5):
309-316
Abstract:
Supplementation
of crystalline amino acids (CAA) in shrimp diets is unsuccessful in most
cases. In the present study, various pre-coated CAA were developed to
minimize the leaching losses from diets in water and assessed using kuruma
shrimp Marsupenaeus japonicus juveniles. Experimental diets were
supplemented with coated CAA or non-coated CAA to simulate the dietary amino
acid profile to that found in the whole body protein of shrimp. The four
diets contained CAA coated with either carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) (diet
1), zein (diet 2), k-carrageenan (diet 3) or agar (diet 4),
respectively. Another four diets contained CMC-coated CAA with the addition
of either zein (diet 5), casein-gelatin (diet 6), zein and k-carrageenan
(diet 7), or casein-gelatin and k-carrageenan (diet 8), respectively.
The 8 weeks feeding trial demonstrated that the diets containing coated
CAA gave significantly higher weight gains than diets containing non-coated
CAA, with the highest value for the diet 6. The diets containing coated CAA
also yielded higher feed conversion efficiency, protein efficiency ratio,
and specific growth rate than diets containing non-coated CAA. Leaching
trials suggested that shrimp growth performance was improved partly due to
the retardation or reduction of CAA leaching by coating them with specific
binders.
(Laboratory
of Aquatic Animal Nutrition, Faculty of Fisheries, Kagoshima University,
Shimoarata-4-50-20, Kagoshima 890-0056, Japan. E-mail: alam1@rocketmail.com)