COVER
THE NUTRITION AND FEEDING OF FARMED FISH AND SHRIMP - A TRAINING MANUAL
1. THE ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS




CONTENTS

GCP/RLA/075/ITA
Field Document 2/E

G O V E R N M E N T   C O O P E R A T I V E   P R O G R A M M E

By

Albert G.J. Tacon



A report prepared for the FAO Trust Fund GCP/RLA/075/ITA Project Support to the Regional Aquaculture Activities for Latin America and the Caribbean

FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS
Brasilia, Brazil
June 1987

This report was prepared during the course of the project identified on the title page. The conclusions and recommendations given in the report are those considered appropriate at the time of its preparation. They may be modified in the light of further knowledge gained at subsequent stages of the project.

The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this document do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the United Nations or the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations concerning the legal or constitutional status of any country, territory or sea area, or concerning the delimitation of frontiers.

PREPARATION OF THIS DOCUMENT

This document is based on the original lecture texts presented by Dr. A.G.J. Tacon to the trainees of the Fourth Senior Aquaculturists Training Course in Pirassununga, Brazil, from 13 June to 9 July 1986 (based at the Centro de Pesquisa e Treinamento em Aquicultura, CEPTA), and has been revised and updated as a training manual to form the basis of an intensive five week subregional training course on the nutrition and feeding of farmed fish and shrimp to be implemented by the FAO Trust Fund GCP/RLA/075/ITA Project within the Latin America and Caribbean Region. The aim of this training course is to create a core of senior instructors and researchers within the Region who inturn will be able to conduct their own national aquaculture nutrition and feeding training programmes, and advise farmers and researchers alike on all aspects of practical feed technology.

Although numerous training manuals exist on the nutrition and feeding of farmed fish and shrimp, these have tended to deal almost exclusively with intensive or complete diet feeding, with little or no mention of semi-intensive feeding methods. Since the majority of finfish and shrimp aquaculture production is currently realised within semi-intensive farming systems, clearly emphasis must also be given to semi-intensive feeding methods such as fertilization, composting, and supplementary diet feeding. All too often it is believed that the only economic way of feeding fish or shrimp is by using a high quality ‘complete’ pelleted diet; it is not, and farmers and researchers alike should not be misguided to believe so. Furthermore, the present manual critically assesses the known nutrient requirements of the major cultured aquaculture species, the methodology used by researchers for the measurement of dietary nutrient requirements and for conducting feeding trials, reviews the semi-intensive and intensive feeding strategies employed in other parts of the world, and attempts to open avenues for the development of an applied aquaculture nutrition and feeding research strategy to suit the needs and desires of the Latin America and Caribbean Region. The training manual is presented in four parts; part 1 deals with the essential nutrients, part 2 deals with nutrient sources, part 3 deals with intensive feeding methods, and part 4 deals with semi-intensive feeding methods.

ABSTRACT
The classification, structure and biological function of the essential nutrients are described; including proteins and amino acids, lipids, carbohydrates, vitamins, minerals, and energy. The quantitative dietary nutrient requirements of fish and shrimp are critically reviewed, and suggestions made for dietary nutrient levels within practical complete diets for carnivorous and omnivorous fish and shrimp species.

Hyperlinks to non-FAO Internet sites do not imply any official endorsement of or responsibility for the opinions, ideas, data or products presented at these locations, or guarantee the validity of the information provided. The sole purpose of links to non-FAO sites is to indicate further information available on related topics.

This electronic document has been scanned using optical character recognition (OCR) software. FAO declines all responsibility for any discrepancies that may exist between the present document and its original printed version.


CONTENTS

1.INTRODUCTION

2.ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS - PROTEINS AND AMINO ACIDS
2.1 Proteins
2.1.1 Composition
2.1.2 Structure
2.1.3 Chemical properties
2.1.4 Classification
2.2 Protein function
2.3 Protein requirements
2.3.1 Optimum dietary protein level
2.3.2 Abiotic factors - temperature and salinity
2.4 Amino acids
2.5 Amino acid function
2.6 Amino acid requirements
2.6.1 Optimum dietary essential amino acid levels
2.6.2 Utilization of free amino acids
2.6.3 Amino acid composition and protein quality
2.7 Evaluation of protein quality
2.8 Nonprotein nitrogenous constituents
2.9 Protein and amino acid pathology
2.9.1 Dietary essential amino acid deficiency
2.9.2 Toxic non-essential amino acids

3. ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS - LIPIDS
3.1 Lipids
3.1.1 Classification
3.1.2 General function
3.2 Fats and oils
3.2.1 Composition
3.2.2 Fatty acid structure and classification
3.2.3 Fatty acid biosynthesis
3.2.4 Essential fatty acid requirements
3.3 Phospholipids
3.3.1 Structure and function
3.3.2 Dietary requirement
3.4 Glycolipids
3.5 Waxes
3.6 Steroids
3.6.1 Cholesterol
3.6.2 Bile acids
3.7 Lipid pathology
3.7.1 Dietary essential fatty acid deficiency
3.7.2 Dietary essential fatty acid toxicity
3.7.3 Toxic non-essential fatty acids
3.7.4 Oxidation of dietary lipids

4. ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS - CARBOHYDRATES
4.1 Carbohydrates
4.1.1 Classification
4.1.2 Monosaccharides
4.1.3 Disaccharides
4.1.4 Homopolysaccharides
4.1.5 Heteropolysaccharides
4.2 Carbohydrate function
4.3 Carbohydrate metabolism
4.4 Dietary carbohydrate utilization

5. ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS - VITAMINS
5.1 Definition and classification
5.2 Water-soluble vitamins
5.2.1 Thiamine
5.2.2 Riboflavin
5.2.3 Pyridoxine
5.2.4 Pantothenic acid
5.2.5 Nicotinic acid
5.2.6 Biotin
5.2.7 Folic acid
5.2.8 Cyanocobalamin
5.2.9 Inositol
5.2.10 Choline
5.2.11 Ascorbic acid
5.3 Fat-soluble vitamins
5.3.1 Retinol
5.3.2 Cholecalciferol
5.3.3 Tocopherol
5.3.4 Phylloquinone
5.4 Dietary vitamin requirements
5.5 Vitamin pathology
5.5.1 Vitamin deficiency
5.5.2 Vitamin toxicity

6. ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS - MINERALS
6.1 Introduction and classification
6.2 General function
6.3 Macroelements
6.3.1 Calcium
6.3.2 Phosphorus
6.3.3 Magnesium
6.3.4 Sodium, Potassium and Chlorine
6.3.5 Sulphur
6.4 Microelements
6.4.1 Iron
6.4.2 Zinc
6.4.3 Manganese
6.4.4 Copper
6.4.5 Cobalt
6.4.6 Iodine
6.4.7 Selenium
6.4.8 Chromium
6.5 Dietary mineral requirements
6.6 Mineral pathology
6.6.1 Mineral deficiency
6.6.2 Mineral toxicity

7. ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS - ENERGY
7.1 Energy and work
7.2 Laws of thermodynamics
7.3 Energy units
7.4 Dietary energy sources
7.5 Energy metabolism
7.6 Energy balance and dietary requirement

8. ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS - RECOMMENDED NUTRIENT SPECIFICATIONS FOR COMPLETE DIETS
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Fish
8.3 Shrimp

9. REFERENCES

LIST OF TABLES

Table

  1. Dietary protein requirement of fish and shrimp (expressed as percent of dry diet)

  2. Quantitative essential amino acid (EAA) requirements of selected fish species
  3. Mean dietary EAA requirement pattern (%) and EAA pattern in body tissue of whole fish, short-necked clam, marine shrimp, and the freshwater prawn
  4. Calculated dietary EAA requirements of fish and shrimp at varying dietary protein levels (values are expressed as a percent of the dry diet)
  5. Chemical score and limiting amino acids of some commonly used feed proteins
  6. Nonprotein nitrogenous constituents derived from amino acids in animals
  7. Dietary essential fatty acid (EFA) requirement of fish (requirement expressed as a percentage of the dry diet)
  8. Carbohydrate classification
  9. Vitamin classification
  10. Dietary vitamin requirements of fish and shrimp
  11. The essential mineral elements
  12. Dietary mineral requirements of fish and shrimp
  13. Availability of various sources of dietary phosphorus in fish
  14. Gross energy value of selected feed ingredeints
  15. Recommended dietary nutrient levels for carnivorous fish species
  16. Recommended dietary nutrient levels for omnivorous fish species
  17. Recommended dietary nutrient levels for carnivorous shrimp species
  18. Recommended dietary nutrient levels for omnivorous shrimp species

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

Figure

  1. The role of natural pond food organisms and artificial feeds in the nutrition of fish and shrimp within extensive, semi-intensive and intensive culture systems
  2. Typical dose response curve
  3. Relationship between pattern of EAA requirements found by feeding experiments using amino acid test diets with carp, Japanese eel, channel catfish and chinook salmon, and the pattern of the same amino acids in fish cărcass
  4. Essential fatty acid composition (g/100g fatty acid) of some common fats and oils
  5. Central role of ATP in cellular energetics
  6. Generalized view of nitrogen balance in fish (after Luquet, 1982)
  7. Utilization of dietary energy in salminids (after Luquet, 1982)