Abstract
Pacific white shrimp, Litopenaeus vannamei, is often grown on feed containing 30–40% soybean meal or other sources of plant protein because of its favorable cost and availability compared to marine animal protein. However, plant material is relatively less attractive and palatable to shrimp compared to animal material. Consequently, the current practice is to include some marine animal meal to enhance the attractability and palatability of feeds containing high levels of plant protein. Our study examined mechanisms underlying krill meal's effects on feed consumption by L. vannamei. The first step required behavioral experiments to quantify in a concentration-dependent manner the effect of krill meal on attractability and palatability of feed using assays of groups of animals. We showed that an aqueous extract of krill meal is highly attractive, causing shrimp to alert, move toward, probe, and grab an airstone releasing it in a concentration-dependent manner and at concentrations as low as 13.3μg/ml. We then showed that krill meal added to feed pellets (with a base diet of 30% soybean meal, 27% poultry protein concentrate, 34% wheat flour, and additional minor components) enhanced the palatability (i.e., consumption) of pellets in a concentration-dependent fashion, with 6% krill meal being significantly effective. The second step required performing two experiments to characterize the mechanisms underlying the enhanced performance of krill-containing pellets. The first experiment tested the hypothesis that krill meal-containing pellets are more attractive than control pellets. Our results did not support this hypothesis for trials simulating short (5-min) feeding trials but did for long (60-min) trials. The second experiment tested the hypothesis that krill meal enhances the shrimps' rate of feeding on pellets, by examining the behavior of individual shrimp in a palatability assay in which individual animals were fed single pellets sequentially until it stopped feeding (defined as not completely consuming a pellet within 60min). This experiment showed that krill meal did not significantly increase the rate of feeding on a pellet, but rather it increased in a concentration-dependent manner the number of pellets eaten and the total time spent eating before shrimp stopped eating. Taken together, our results support the idea that krill meal is a chemostimulant whose major effect when added to feed pellets is to increase the pellets' palatability by prolonging the feeding bout and thus the amount eaten, but not affecting how quickly a shrimp eats each pellet. Our results might have practical implications on the composition and presentation of pellets to cultured shrimp, and they also could be used as a baseline for the development of non-animal based chemostimulatory additives and for the aquaculture of other species of shrimp.Statement of relevancePotential impact on the formulation of pellet feed for shrimp.
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.