Abstract

Four practical diets containing 2% of crude protein (CP) (180 and 280 g kg )1 ), with or without menhaden fish meal (FM), were fed to Australian red claw Cherax quadricarinatus during a 97-day feeding trial. Growth, survival, body composition and processing traits of pond-cultured red claw were determined. Juvenile red claw (mean individual weight of 5.75 ± 3.3 g) were randomly stocked into twelve 0.04-ha ponds at a rate of 1000 per pond (25 000 ha )1 ), and each diet was fed to three ponds. At harvest, the final mean weight of red claw fed Diet 4 (0 g kg )1 FM and 280 g kg )1 CP) and Diet 3 (113 g kg )1 FM and 280 g kg )1 CP) was significantly (P < 0.05) higher (62.4 and 58.5 g, respectively) than red claw fed Diet 1 (73 g kg )1 FM and 180 g kg )1 CP; 51.7 g) and Diet 2 (0 g kg )1 FM and 180 g kg )1 CP; 53.0 g). Red claw fed diets containing 280 g kg )1 CP, with or without FM, had significantly higher percent weight gain (894 and 959%, respectively) compared to red claw fed 180 g kg )1 CP, with or without FM (778 and 799%, respectively). Feed conversion ratio, percent survival, and total yield among treatments, which averaged 3.55, 65.2%, and 724 kg ha )1 overall, were not significantly different. Results from this study indicate that pond-cultured red claw stocked at 25 000 ha )1 can be fed a practical diet containing 280 g kg )1 CP with 0 g kg )1 FM if a combination of plant-protein ingredients (soybean meal, distillers dried grains with solubles, and milo) is added; however, if the percentage of dietary protein level is 180 g kg )1 , growth is reduced even if FM is added at 73 g kg )1 of the diet. Use

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call