Abstract

Abstract Nile tilapia ( Oreochromis niloticus ) and silver carp ( Hypophthalmichthys molitrix ) held in timed-pulse feeding chambers were provided water dominated either by green algae ( Scenedesmus , Ankistrodesmus and Tetraedron ) or by cyanobacteria ( Microcystis ) to compare filtration rates (FRs). FRs were expressed as suspended particulate organic carbon (POC)/kg wet fish weight/h and as phytoplankton units filtered based on counts. Nile tilapia and silver carp filtration significantly reduced phytoplankton number of both taxonomic groups with the larger phytoplankton being filtered proportionally more than the smaller phytoplankton. Nile tilapia FR of green algae was significantly higher than silver carp; however, silver carp FR of cyanobacteria was higher than Nile tilapia. Ivlev's 90% saturation FRs (FR 90 ) in green-algal and cyanobacterial water sources were 702 and 812 mgC/kg/h for Nile tilapia and 414 and 1028 mgC/kg/h for silver carp, respectively. Silver carp were observed to reach these FR 90 values at lower POC concentrations than Nile tilapia with both green algae and cyanobacteria.

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