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Substituting fish meal with soybean meal in diets of juvenile cobia Rachycentron canadum
Affiliation:1. College of Animal Science, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou 510642, PR China;2. Shandong Shengsuo Aquatic Feed Research Center, Yantai 265601, PR China;3. Shandong Marine Resource and Environment Research Institute, Yantai 264006, PR China;1. Pacific Biological Station, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Nanaimo, British Columbia V9T 6N7, Canada;2. Centre for Aquaculture and Environmental Research, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, West Vancouver, British Columbia V7V 1N6, Canada;3. Department of Chemistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2G2, Canada;4. Aquatic Diagnostic Services, Atlantic Veterinary College, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island C1A 4P3, Canada;1. Marine College, Shandong University, Weihai 264209, China;2. Department of Basic Sciences and Aquatic Medicine, School of Veterinary Medicine, Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU), N-0033 Oslo, Norway;3. State Key Laboratory of Microbial Technology, Shandong University, Jinan 250100, China;1. Institute of Marine and Environmental Technology, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, 701 East Pratt St., Baltimore, MD 21202, United States;2. Schillinger Genetics and Navita Premium Feed Ingredients, 4401 Westown Parkway, Suite 225, West Des Moines, IA 50266, United States
Abstract:An 8-week feeding trial was conducted with cobia to determine the amount of soybean meal that could replace fish meal in formulated diets without reducing growth. Juvenile cobia (initial mean weight, 32 g) were fed 48% crude protein diets in which dietary protein was supplied by brown fish meal or a mixture of hexane extracted soybean meal and the fish meal, resulting in 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50% and 60% of fish meal protein being replaced by soybean protein. The fish readily accepted all seven experimental diets and no fish died during the trial. Detrimental effects on growth performance were obvious when half of the fish meal protein was replaced by soybean protein. There existed a significant difference in fish weight gain, feed conversion ratio (FCR), protein efficiency ratio (PER) and net protein utilization (NPU) when the replacement level for fish meal protein was increased from 40% to 50%, indicating that up to 40% of fish meal protein can be replaced by soybean meal protein without causing reduction in growth and protein utilization. On the other hand, quadratic regression analysis shows a growth optimum at 16.9% replacement of fish meal protein by soybean meal protein. Lipid concentrations in the cobia muscle increased significantly as dietary soybean meal increased. Muscle concentrations of free threonine and histidine decreased as use of the soybean meal increased in the diets. Since methionine concentration in the test diets decreased from 2.52 to 1.36 g 16 g?1 N as the soybean meal protein replacement level was increased from 0% to 60% while all other essential amino acids remained relatively constant, dietary requirement of methionine was calculated assuming it was equally available between the two proteins. The broken-line model analysis based on fish weight gain shows a breakpoint when dietary methionine+cystine concentration was 2.66 g 16 g?1 N or 1.28 g 100 g?1 diet.
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