4.5 Article

Acoustic feeding responses using marine chemoattractants in plant-based diets for naive and non-naive Litopenaeus vannamei

Journal

APPLIED ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR SCIENCE
Volume 257, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.applanim.2022.105792

Keywords

Feed consumption; Acoustic behavior; Krill meal; Squid meal; Fish hydrolysate

Funding

  1. National Institute of Food and Agriculture, USDA ARS [58-6010-0-007]

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This study investigates the use of chemoattractants in plant-based shrimp diets to improve attractability and palatability. It also examines the use of passive acoustic monitoring to identify behavioral responses related to diet by recording the sounds emitted by shrimp during feeding activity. The results show that the inclusion of chemoattractants significantly improves the acoustic feeding behavior and food consumption of both naive and non-naive Litopenaeus vannamei shrimps, with krill meal and fish hydrolysate having the highest effect.
The inclusion of chemoattractants has been investigated to improve the attractability and palatability of plant -based shrimp diets. A more recent approach utilizes passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) to record the sounds (clicks) emitted by shrimp during feeding activity allowing the identification of behavioral responses related to the diets. In the present study we automatically identified click signals in PAM recordings at sampling frequency of 192 kHz. This methodology was applied to evaluate the efficiency of three chemoattractants (krill meal, squid meal and fish hydrolysate) added to a basal all-plant diet on the acoustic feeding behavior and food consumption of naive (without acclimation) and non-naive (acclimated to the diets) Litopenaeus vannamei. Five diets were used: basal all-plant diet (AP, negative control) and its modifications to contain 20 g/Kg of krill meal (AP+KM), 20 g/Kg of squid meal (AP+SM) and 40 g/Kg of fish hydrolysate (AP+FH); a diet with 120 g/Kg fishmeal (FM) was used as a positive control. Ten shrimp (6.8 +/- 0.6 g; mean +/- SD) were stocked per aquarium (70 L) in a clear water recirculation system (30 aquaria, five diets with six replicates). The food consumption and acoustic activity were evaluated simultaneously in each aquarium over a 30-min period during two consecutive days for each trial, naive and non-naive shrimp. Strong positive relationships (r = 0.78-0.81; P < 0.001) were found between food consumption and total number of clicks emitted by naive and non-naive shrimp. Overall, the inclusion of the chemoattractants to the plant-based diet had a positive effect improving acoustic feeding behavior and food consumption for naive and non-naive L. vannamei. In particular, the response of non-naive shrimp to chemo-attractants was markedly increased, and the highest clicking activity was attained by using krill meal (AP+KM), followed by fish hydrolysate (AP+FH). The new analytical method proved to be a useful alternative approach for studying shrimp feeding behavior, also indicating the potential of PAM to forecast feed intake and improve efficiency of feed management.

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