Abstract
For improving the economic and environmental sustainability of fish farming, it is necessary to optimize feeding regimes. From this viewpoint, we monitored the growth and mortality of red sea bream ( Pagrus major), C and N fluxes and sediment chemistry at 2 commercial fish cages; cage 1 (conventional satiation feeding) and cage 2 (restricted feeding: same feeding frequency but 18% reduction in the feed amount) for 276 days. The similar specific growth rates (0.43% in cage 1 and 0.39% in cage 2) but different feed conversion efficiencies (0.54 in cage 1 and 0.62 in cage 2) and mortality (> 2-times higher in cage 1) between the 2 cages, indicate overfeeding in cage 1 culture. Elemental and stable isotopic analyses of sediment trap materials enabled the quantification of waste feed- and fecal matter-derived organic matter (OM) separately. The results shows that (1) aquaculture-derived OM comprised most of the fish-farm settling OM, excluding the period from January to April, when natural OM often accounted for a half of the bulk OM, (2) there was a difference in the seasonal trend between the fluxes of waste feed and fecal matter, and (3) there were no differences in the percentage compositions and fluxes of waste feed and fecal matter between the 2 cages. The isotopic analysis showed that the waste feed-derived OM in the sediment below cage 2 was 24% less than that below cage 1, suggesting effect of restricted feeding. Determining the relative amount of waste feed and fecal matter in settling and sedimentary OM is an effective method to evaluate the optimum feeding regime.
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