Fish Feed as Nutrition
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Transcript Fish Feed as Nutrition
Fish Feed as Nutrition for Fish and
Plants
Kevin Fitzsimmons, Ph.D.
Sec. Tres. American Tilapia Association
Past President – World Aquaculture Society
Professor, University of Arizona
Aquaponics
12 April 2012
Contents
Nutrition
Ingredients
and Formulations
Manufacture and Preparation
Storage, Handling, and Feeding Methods
Nutrition and feeding behaviours
Tilapia
are omnivores (eat lots of things)
Especially capable of consuming decaying
vegetable matter
Long intestine
Filter feeders (algae, bacteria, plankton) when
young
Need protein and balanced nutrition for rapid
growth
Maybe more cost effective to settle for moderate
growth
Feeding strategy
Juvenile
fish are especially good at filter
feeding phytoplankton.
Many hatcheries utilize greenwater culture
Juveniles also filter feed on small
zooplankters (especially crustaceans)
Save money on juvenile feeds by partial
nutrition from natural feed in juvenile ponds
and tanks
Tilapia nutrition decisions
Natural
herbivores and detritivores.
Opportunistic feeders grazing on algae and
bacteria in production system.
Fry and fingerlings need high protein
(50-40%) diet
Growout needs lower protein (32-28%) diet
“Organic” diets may be needed for “organic”
buyers
Compare FCR to decide most efficient diet
Minimize fish meal in diet
Use
more soybean meal
Utilize other grains treated with phytase
Increase use of other by-product meals
(meat and bone, blood, feather, poultry byproduct, brewers waste, etc.)
Examine other locally available ingredients
(rice bran, cassava leaf meal, etc)
Tilapia Biology
Long
convoluted intestine.
Digests complex organic matter
Fry are filter feeders
Adults are grazers
Proteins
Tilapia
need balanced set of amino acids.
Basic building blocks of proteins (and
muscles)
Ten essential amino acids (required)
several more are supplemental
Lipids
Lipids
are basically fats.
Fish need a variety of long chain
hydrocarbon fatty acids for proper growth
Tilapia will also bio-accumulate lipids from
consumed algae
Remember organic chem?
Found
in many freshwater and marine algae,
canola, walnuts, soybean, and flaxseeds
Essential part of the nutritional requirement of
almost all organisms
Important in neural and cardiovascular functions
Facts about fatty acids in other
farmed fish
Fatty acids can also be
elevated in fish
depending on feed
ingredients
Higher omega-3’s are
expensive and will likely
require higher price
Tilapia - Moderate in PUFA’s:
0.387 g/100g raw
0.600 g/100g cooked
Tilapia - Moderate omega 3 FA’s:
0.141 g/100g raw
0.220 g/100g cooked
Source – USDA- ARS Lab
Carbohydrates
Needed
for metabolic energy
Carbohydrates are polymers of sugar.
Common ingredients are corn, sorghum,
rice
Molasses is mostly sugar and water. Does
not supply as much energy as equal mass of
lipid (fat)
Fiber
Less
digestible material to help move
material though the intestines.
Helps with micronutrients
Vitamins and minerals
Commonly
supplied in “premix”
Often available in natural production of
ponds.
Not critical for most semi-intensive fish
farm operations.
Very critical in intensive systems (cages,
raceways)
Pigments
Salmon and trout feeds sometimes include ingredients
that impart reddish or pink color to the flesh.
Astanxanthin, canthaxanthin and beta-carotene are
commonly used.
These may be plant or algae extracts, or chemically
derived.
May also use whole algae as ingredient (Spirulina or
Dunaliella)
Yes, the same extracts and algae sold in health food
stores, (which was not included in the scare stories)
Binding agents
Gums,
agar, cooked starches, wheat and
corn glutens, and other ingredients can be
used for binding.
Preservatives
Ethoxyquin
Anti-oxidants
Goal
is to avoid rancidity, loss of nutrients
Attractants
Fish
oil, fish meal, and fish solubles are
good attractants
Ingredients and formulations
Normally
need high protein diets for young
40-50%
Protein
requirements drop as fish reach
reproductive age. Lipid demand might
increase with egg formation. 30-32%
Growout diets only need 25% protein
Manufacturing and preparations
Pellet mill
Compression pellet mill
Feed
mixed with water to dough consistency
Moistened feed put into hopper, pushed down
to auger screw
Auger forces feed through the die head.
Holes in die determine pellet width
Knife blade cuts pellets to desired length
Extruders
Floating
feeds
Feed mixes with steam in barrel of extruder
Cooks ingredients, improves palatability
Gelatinizes starches
Steam expansion and auger forces feed out
of barrel with rapid expansion.
Traps air in pellet, allows to float
Meat grinders and pasta mills
Bioflocs
Deliberate
culture of high density of
phytoplankton and bacteria
Storage
Always
keep feed as dry and cool as possible
Avoids spoilage and rancidity of fats in diet
Bags should be on pallets, off floor to allow
air to circulate and slow pests (mice, rats,
roaches, ants, from getting to bags
Large amount can be stored in bulk in silos.
Handling
Reduce
rough handling
Crushed pellets form fines which are not
consumed by fish.
Fed by hand, blower, belts
Conclusions
Tilapia
are omnivores
But eating anything will not make you grow
fast and strong
Tilapia need balanced nutrition for rapid
growth just like human children