<b>Inclusion levels of soluble carbohydrate in the diet for Pacific white shrimp (<em>Litopenaeus vannamei</em> Boone, 1931)</b> - doi: 10.4025/actascianimsci.v33i4.10879
Keywords:
levels of carbohydrates, nutrition, performance, shrimp farming
Abstract
It was evaluated different inclusion levels of carbohydrates (20, 25, 30 and 35%) on the performance of Pacific white shrimp fed isoprotein diets (33% crude protein) and isoenergy (4,700 kcal kg -1) diets in a complete randomized design with four treatments (n = 3). The experiment was performed in a pond with 1,200 m 2 and 1.5 m depth, where food intake, daily weight gain, feed conversion, protein efficiency ratio, and retention rates of crude protein and gross energy and survival rate of shrimp were evaluated. For the different inclusion levels of soluble carbohydrates, there were no differences for feed conversion, and retention rates of crude protein and gross energy and survival rate, resulting in means of 1.22:1, 1.2%, 0.74 and 95.0%, respectively. Inclusion levels of soluble carbohydrate significantly influenced the other variables. It was observed that increasing levels of soluble carbohydrate quadraticaly influenced (p <0.05) the average weight gain, average feed intake and protein efficiency ratio. Based on weight gain, it is recommended soluble carbohydrate inclusion at the level of 25.61% in diets for Litopenaeus vannamei weighing more than 9 gDownloads
Download data is not yet available.
Published
2011-04-28
How to Cite
Camboim, W. Q., Braga, L. G. T., Ferraz, N. R., & Azevedo, R. V. de. (2011). <b>Inclusion levels of soluble carbohydrate in the diet for Pacific white shrimp (<em>Litopenaeus vannamei</em> Boone, 1931)</b> - doi: 10.4025/actascianimsci.v33i4.10879. Acta Scientiarum. Animal Sciences, 33(4), 359-364. https://doi.org/10.4025/actascianimsci.v33i4.10879
Issue
Section
Nonruminant Nutrition
DECLARATION OF ORIGINALITY AND COPYRIGHTS
- I Declare that current article is original and has not been submitted for publication, in part or in whole, to any other national or international journal.
The copyrights belong exclusively to the authors. Published content is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0) guidelines, which allows sharing (copy and distribution of the material in any medium or format) and adaptation (remix, transform, and build upon the material) for any purpose, even commercially, under the terms of attribution.
Read this link for further information on how to use CC BY 4.0 properly.
0.9
2019CiteScore
29th percentile
Powered by 





























