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Carbohydrate level in the diet of silver barb,<i>Puntius gonionotus</i>(Bleeker) fingerlings: effect on growth, nutrient utilization and whole body composition
58
Citations
48
References
2009
Year
NutritionCarbohydrate LevelBotanyG Crude ProteinNutritive ValueExperimental NutritionSilver BarbEnergy DigestibilityBody CompositionBiochemical NutritionFeed AdditivePlant NutritionPublic HealthNutrient UtilizationHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyNutrient PhysiologyIn Vitro FermentationAnimal NutritionFeed EvaluationMicronutrientsBiologyPhysiologyFeed IntakeGut Enzyme ActivityNutritional SciencesMetabolism
Five iso-nitrogenous (300 g crude protein kg−1 diet) semi-purified diets with graded levels of carbohydrate at 220 (D-1), 260 (D-2), 300 (D-3), 340 (D-4) and 380 (D-5) g kg−1 diet were fed ad libitum to Puntius gonionotus fingerlings (average weight 0.59±0.01 g) in triplicate groups (20 fish replicate−1) for a period of 90 days to determine the effect of the dietary carbohydrate level on the growth, nutrient utilization, digestibility, gut enzyme activity and whole-body composition of fish. Fifteen flow-through cement tanks of 100 L capacity with a flow rate of 0.5 L min−1 were used for rearing the fish. The maximum weight gain, specific growth rate, protein efficiency ratio, RNA:DNA ratio, whole-body protein content, protease activity, protein and energy digestibility and minimum feed conversion ratio (FCR) were found in the D-2 group fed with 260 g carbohydrate kg−1 diet. The highest protein and energy retention was also recorded in the same group. However, from the second-order polynomial regression analysis, the maximum growth and nutrient utilization of P. gonionotus fingerlings was 291.3–298.3 g carbohydrate kg−1 diet at a dietary protein level of 300 g kg−1 with a protein/energy (P/E) ratio of 20.58 −20.75 g protein MJ−1.
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