Compensatory growth and food consumption in gibel carp, Carassius auratus gibelio, and Chinese longsnout catfish, Leiocassis longirostris, experiencing cycles of feed deprivation and re-feeding


Autoria(s): Xiaoming Zhu; Shouqi Xie; Zhongju Zou; Wu Lei; Yibo Cui; Yunxia Yang; R.J. Wootton
Data(s)

2004

Resumo

The compensatory responses of juvenile gibel carp and Chinese longsnout catfish to four cycles of 1 part of a study designed to determine feeding regimes that would maximise growth rates. Both species showed compensatory growth in the re-feeding periods. The compensation was not sufficient for the deprived fish to match the growth trajectories of controls fed to satiation daily. The compensatory growth response was more clearly defined in the later cycles. The deprived fish showed hyperphagia during the 2-week periods of re-feeding and the hyperphagic response was clearer in the later cycles. The hyperphagia tended to persist for both weeks of the re-feeding period. The gibel carp showed no difference in gross growth efficiency between deprived and control fish. In the catfish, the gross growth efficiency of the deprived fish was marginally higher than that of control fish, but the efficiency varied erratically from week to week. Over the experiment, the deprived fish achieved growth rates 75-80% of those shown by control fish, although fed at a frequency of 66%. There was no evidence of growth over-compensation with the deprivation-re-feeding protocol used in this study. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://ir.ihb.ac.cn/handle/152342/9388

http://www.irgrid.ac.cn/handle/1471x/59207

Fonte

Xiaoming Zhu; Shouqi Xie; Zhongju Zou; Wu Lei; Yibo Cui; Yunxia Yang; R.J. Wootton.Compensatory growth and food consumption in gibel carp, Carassius auratus gibelio, and Chinese longsnout catfish, Leiocassis longirostris, experiencing cycles of feed deprivation and re-feeding,AQUACULTURE,2004,241(1-4):235-247

Palavras-Chave #Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology #gibel carp #Chinese long snout catfish #compensatory growth #hyperphagia #growth efficiency
Tipo

期刊论文