Abstract

The demand for products to replace high-cost raw materials, such oil and fish meal, in the manufacture of feed for use in aquaculture, while also guaranteeing the nutritional quality of the diets, is increasing. Silage produced with fish and vegetables residues is a low-cost and efficient protein source. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the physiological and biochemical responses of tambaqui fingerlings fed four different levels of silage included in commercial feed with 28% crude protein, over two periods: 45 and 90 days. Each treatment was carried out over three replications, with 10 tambaqui in each 100 L experimental tank. At the end of each established period, blood samples were collected from five animals from each repetition to determine the hematological and biochemical variables. Body weight and total length, hepatosomatic and liposomal indices and hematocrit of specimens fed with diets supplemented with silage did not exhibit significant changes in both assessment period. After 45 days of feeding, the hemoglobin concentration increased when tambaqui were fed a diet including 20% silage. The red blood cell count, mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular hemoglobin did not change between treatments in either period. The total protein concentrations increased significantly in the plasma of tambaqui fed with diets with the inclusion of 5 and 10% of silage, evaluated after feeding for 45 days. It was found that the groups which had silage included in their diet did not exhibit significant alterations in the evaluated parameters, and the diet was therefore not consider harmful to the health of tambaqui. Therefore, the use of silage as a feed supplement during tambaqui farming is a sustainable alternative for producers, as it leads to a reduction of impacts of fish and vegetables waste disposal.

Highlights

  • Tambaqui, Colossoma macropomum (Cuvier, 1818), belongs to the order Characiformes, and is considered the second largest scaly fish in the Amazon basin (Goulding and Carvalho, 1982)

  • Boscolo et al (2004) showed that flour from tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus), corvina (Plagioscion squamosissimus) and shrimp (Macrobrachium amazonicum) residues can be used as ingredients in the formulation of fish feed, as a source of protein

  • The objective of the present study was to verify the physiological responses of tambaqui (C. macropomum) after their diet was supplemented with silage produced with fish and vegetables residues

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Summary

Introduction

Colossoma macropomum (Cuvier, 1818), belongs to the order Characiformes, and is considered the second largest scaly fish in the Amazon basin (Goulding and Carvalho, 1982). It has omnivorous feeding habits, with a preference for fruits and seeds (Araújo-Lima and Goulding, 1998). It is among the most important aquaculture species in the North of Brazil and is the third most cultivated fish in farms at a national level (Ruffino and Roubach, 2009). Many experimental studies have sought alternative products that can replace, or reduce, the use of these raw materials at a lower cost while ensuring the nutritional quality of the species under cultivation (Cyrino et al, 2010). Boscolo et al (2004) showed that flour from tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus), corvina (Plagioscion squamosissimus) and shrimp (Macrobrachium amazonicum) residues can be used as ingredients in the formulation of fish feed, as a source of protein

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