Effects of soluble dietary cellulose on specific growth rate, survival and digestive enzyme activities in three freshwater crayfish (Cherax) species


Autoria(s): Dammannagoda, Lalith; Pavasovic, Ana; Hurwood, David; Mather, Peter
Contribuinte(s)

Shumway, Sandra

Parsons, Jay

Allen, Steve

Bowker, Jim

Data(s)

01/04/2013

Resumo

Three native freshwater crayfish Cherax species are farmed in Australia namely; Redclaw (Cherax quadricarinatus), Marron (C. tenuimanus), and Yabby (C. destructor). Lack of appropriate data on specific nutrient requirements for each of these species, however, has constrained development of specific formulated diets and hence current use of over-formulated feeds or expensive marine shrimp feeds, limit their profitability. A number of studies have investigated nutritional requirements in redclaw that have focused on replacing expensive fish meal in formulated feeds with non-protein, less expensive substitutes including plant based ingredients. Confirmation that freshwater crayfish possess endogenous cellulase genes, suggests their potential ability to utilize complex carbohydrates like cellulose as nutrient sources in their diet. To date, studies have been limited to only C. quadricarinatus and C. destructor and no studies have compared the relative ability of each species to utilize soluble cellulose in their diets. Individual feeding trials of late-juveniles of each species were conducted separately in an automated recirculating culture system over 12 week cycles. Animals were fed either a test diet (TD) that contained 20% soluble cellulose or a reference diet (RD) substituted with the same amount of corn starch. Water temperature, conductivity and pH were maintained at constant and optimum levels for each species. Animals were fed at 3% of their body weight twice daily and wet body weight was recorded bi-weekly. At the end of experiment, all animals were harvested, measured and midgut gland extracts assayed for alpha-amylase, total protease and cellulase activity levels. After the trial period, redclaw fed with RD showed significantly higher (p<0.05) specific growth rate (SGR) compare with animals fed the TD while SGR of marron and yabby fed the two diets were not significantly different (p<0.05). Cellulase expression levels in redclaw were not significantly different between diets. Marron and yabby showed significantly higher cellulase activity when fed the RD. Amylase and protease activity in all three species were significantly higher in the animals fed with RD (Table 1). These results indicate that test animals of all species can utilize starch better than dietary soluble cellulose in their diet and inclusion of 20% soluble cellulose in diets does not appear to have any significant negative effect on their growth rate but survival was impacted in C. quadricarinatus while not in C. tenuimanus or C. destructor.

Formato

application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.presentationml.presentation

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/61181/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/61181/1/Dammannagoda_689_85.pptx

Dammannagoda, Lalith, Pavasovic, Ana, Hurwood, David, & Mather, Peter (2013) Effects of soluble dietary cellulose on specific growth rate, survival and digestive enzyme activities in three freshwater crayfish (Cherax) species. In Shumway, Sandra, Parsons, Jay , Allen, Steve, & Bowker, Jim (Eds.) Aquaculture 2013, 21-25 February 2013, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 Please consult the authors

Fonte

School of Biomedical Sciences; School of Earth, Environmental & Biological Sciences; Faculty of Health; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #060499 Genetics not elsewhere classified #060603 Animal Physiology - Systems #070401 Aquaculture #Crustacean aquaculture, freshwater crayfish, Cherax, redclaw, marron, yabby #Soluble cellulose, carboxy methyl cellulose, carbohydrates #Endogenous cellulase, endo beta glucanase, amylase, protease #Digestibility, digestive enzyme activity, specific enzyme activity #protein sparing
Tipo

Conference Item