4.5 Article

Growth performance, haematology, antioxidant status, immune response and histology of common carp (Cyprinus carpio L.) fed biofloc grown on different carbon sources

Journal

AQUACULTURE RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 1, Pages 393-403

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/are.13469

Keywords

antioxidative; biofloc; common carp; different carbon sources; immunity

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science, Research and Technology

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A 10weeks trial was performed to investigate how different carbon sources (sugar beet molasses: SBM+BFT, sugar: S+BFT, corn starch: CS+BFT) along with control affect welfare status of common carp (Cyprinus carpio L.) fingerlings in biofloc-based tanks. Three hundred healthy fingerlings (22.5 +/- 0.2g) were randomly distributed in 12 tanks (70L) at a density of 8.02kg/m(3) (25 fish/tank). The fish in BFT treatments fed only 75% feeding rate of control. At the end of the experiment no differences were seen between the groups in case of growth performance, but the fish reared in CS+BFT had a significant lower food conversion ratio compared with the others (p<.05). Different carbon sources did not affect on haematological parameters (p>.05). Total serum protein and antibody concentration differed in treatments, and the highest values were found in S+BFT and CS+BFT treatments (p<.05). No significant differences were observed in case of lysozyme, superoxide dismutase and complement activity in treatments (p>.05), whereas the fish in BFT treatments showed a significant higher total antioxidant capacity and lower glutathione peroxidase than the control (p<.05). Different carbon sources resulted in no change in goblet and kupffer cells in intestine and liver respectively. The highest relative percentage survival was obtained in the CS+BFT and S+BFT (50%) in comparison with SBM+BFT (20%) treatment. The results obtained in this experiment, suggest that corn starch improves immune response, diseases resistance and histology of digestive and respiratory systems in carp fingerlings when used as a carbon source in zero water exchange system.

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