Abstract

A 4-week study was conducted to evaluate the effects of different dietary protein levels (25%, 30%, 35% and 40%) on the growth and survival of juvenile Litopenaeus vannamei raised in a low salinity (4.6 g L⁻¹), zero-water exchange culture system, as well as on the nitrogen budget and ammonia efflux rate. No significant differences were observed among the dietary treatments for final weight, weight gain or survival of shrimp, although the best performance was observed in the 25% protein treatment group. Both weight and survival decreased as the dietary protein increased. Significant differences (P<0.05) were observed in the ammonia concentration among dietary treatments during the first 2 weeks of the experiment. The highest concentration was measured in the 40% dietary protein treatment (5.88 mg NH4-N L⁻¹). The nitrogen budget showed that the nitrogen loss increased as the dietary protein increased under the experimental conditions; the largest amount of nitrogen recovered as shrimp biomass (42.9%) was in the 25% protein treatment group, and the largest amount of unaccounted nitrogen (39.5%) was in the 40% protein treatment. Under these conditions, utilization of low-protein diets resulted in better performance, presumably because they provided more carbon for heterotrophic bacteria and reduced the nitrogen loading of the system.

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