Effect of dietary lipid increments on the growth performance, feed utilization, and carcass proximate composition and intraperitoneal fat of marble goby (Oxyeleotris marmoratus)

The present study was conducted to investigate the growth performance and feed utilization of marble goby,Oxyeleotris marmorata, juveniles fed with different levels of dietary lipid. Juvenile fish (initial mean weight 2.76 g) were fed with is onitrogenous diets including 10, 14, 18 and 22% of dietar...

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Main Authors: Yong, Annita,Seok Kian, Shing, Yau Ooi, Rossita Shapawi, Amal Kumar Biswas, Takii Kenji
Format: Article
Language:English
English
Published: Central Fisheries Research Institute (CFRI) Trabzon 2015
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Online Access:https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/15345/1/Effect_of_dietary_lipid_increments_on_the_growth_performance.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/15345/7/Effect%20of%20dietary%20lipid%20increments%20on%20the%20growth%20performance%2C%20feed%20utilization%2C%20and%20carcass%20proximate%20composition%20and%20intraperitoneal%20fat%20of%20marble%20goby%20%28Oxyeleotris%20marmoratus%29.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/15345/
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Summary:The present study was conducted to investigate the growth performance and feed utilization of marble goby,Oxyeleotris marmorata, juveniles fed with different levels of dietary lipid. Juvenile fish (initial mean weight 2.76 g) were fed with is onitrogenous diets including 10, 14, 18 and 22% of dietary lipid in triplicate groups for 15 weeks. The results showed that the Bhighest growth performance and feed utilization was observed in fish fed D10. The increase of dietary lipid from 10 to 22 % did not improve growth, feed conversion rates, protein efficiency ratio, nitrogen retention efficiency, and apparent digestibility coefficients of protein and lipid (P>0.05). The increase of dietary lipid had significantly increased the whole body and hepatic lipid, hepato-somatic index, visceral-somatic index and intraperitoneal fat levels (P<0.05). These results suggest that there is no protein sparing effect of high dietary lipid levels in O. Marmorata due to possibly a limited ability to utilize dietary lipid. Based on the second-order polynomial regression analysis on protein efficiency ratio, ca. 12.1% of dietary lipid appears to be optimumfor growth from 2.76g to 13.76g body weight of O. marmorata juveniles.