4.7 Article

Reducing dietary wild derived fishmeal inclusion levels in production diets for large yellowtail kingfish (Seriola lalandi)

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AQUACULTURE
卷 572, 期 -, 页码 -

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DOI: 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2023.739487

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Yellowtail kingfish; Fishmeal; Sustainability; Alternative ingredients; FIFO

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This study investigates the effect of substituting wild derived fishmeal with commercially relevant alternative ingredients for large yellowtail kingfish. The results show that the substitution does not significantly impact the growth, feed utilisation, health, and blood parameters of the fish. It is recommended that large yellowtail kingfish feeds should include a minimum of 10% wild derived fishmeal and a combination of poultry meal, soy protein concentrate, and fishmeal.
Further research to understand the effect of dietary wild derived fishmeal (WD-FM) substitution with commercially relevant alternative ingredients for large yellowtail kingfish (Seriola lalandi; YTK) was investigated. This 36-week study was designed to replace dietary inclusions of WD-FM with alternative protein ingredients including poultry meal, soy protein concentrate and by-product fishmeal (PM, SPC and BP-FM) and measure the effect on the growth performance, feed utilisation, and health of large YTK (2.5 kg initial weight) at ambient water temperatures (average 16.6 degrees C). Six diets were formulated on a digestible basis to contain 39% digestible protein (-45-46% crude protein), 23% digestible lipid (-24-25% crude lipid), and a digestible energy level of 17 MJ kg-1 (-19 MJ kg-1 gross energy level). Fish were fed to apparent satiation once daily at 10:00 h. Substitution of fish meal with alternative ingredients did not significantly impact fish growth, feed utilisation, gastrointestinal health, blood haematology or measured biochemistry indices. Results from the current study will allow reductions to the dietary WD-FM inclusion levels, with tangible sustainability benefits. The inclusion of the alternative protein sources resulted in improvements in the fish in-fish out ratios of up to 35.1%. This study suggests formulation criteria for large YTK should include a minimum of 10% WD-FM. Further to this, at least 30% of the diet should consist of a combination of poultry meal, soy protein concentrate and fishmeal (both wild and by-product). Our data further support the use of BP-FM up to-20% inclusion, while PM and SPC should be limited to-10% inclusion until further data is available on these raw materials in YTK feeds. These recommendations will facilitate formulation flexibility for large YTK feeds, enabling formulators to adapt to changes to extrinsic factors such as raw material availability, and sustainability while minimising cost and performance impacts.

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