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Dietary utility of enzyme-treated fish meal for juvenile Pacific bluefin tuna <Emphasis Type="Italic">Thunnus orientalis</Emphasis>
Authors:Seung-Cheol Ji  Osamu Takaoka  Amal Kbiswas  Manabu Seoka  Keita Ozaki  Jun Kohbara  Masaharu Ukawa  Sadao Shimeno  Hidetsuyo Hosokawa  Kenji Takii
Institution:Fisheries Laboratory, Kinki University, Nachikatsuura, Wakayama 649-5145,;Faculty of Bioresources, Mie University, Tsu, Mie 514-8507,;Fisheries Research Institute, Marubeni-Nisshin Feed Co. Ltd, Atsumi, Aichi 441-3605, and;Faculty of Agriculture, Kochi University, Nankoku, Kochi 783-8502, Japan
Abstract:ABSTRACT:   In order to develop an artificial diet, the dietary utility of enzyme-treated fish meal was investigated for juvenile Pacific bluefin tuna Thunnus orientalis (PBT). Diets containing each 63% of Chilean fish meal (FM), enzyme-treated Chilean fish meal (EC) and enzyme-treated Peruvian fish meal (EP), with 10% bonito oil and raw sand lance Ammodytes personatus (SL) were fed to juvenile tuna six times per day for one week. In a different trial, diets EC and SL were fed to tuna six times per day for 2 weeks. Only diet EC sustained similar growth or caused lower survival and higher feed efficiency, hepato- and enterosomatic indices and final carcass lipid content as compared to those of SL. Diets FM and EP led to lower specific growth rate (SGR) but similar feed efficiency, survival and hepatosomatic index, yet higher enterosomatic index. Moreover, PBT fed diet EC for 2 weeks led to similar growth performance but higher final carcass and hepatic lipid contents, and plasma cholesterol and phospholipid levels than those fed SL. Carcass fatty acid composition of diet EC group had lower 20:5  n -3 and 22:6  n -3 levels than the SL group. These results revealed that EC, as a suitable dietary protein source, could sustain growth of PBT, while dietary bonito oil led to higher carcass lipid but lower accumulation of n -3 highly unsaturated fatty acids.
Keywords:enzyme-treated Chilean fish meal  growth performance  lipid  Pacific bluefin tuna  protein
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