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Dietary threonine requirement of fingerling Indian major carp, Cirrhinus mrigala (Hamilton)
51
Citations
35
References
2004
Year
Indian Major CarpNutritionNutritive ValueCirrhinus MrigalaExperimental NutritionBody CompositionFeed AdditivePublic HealthHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyAnimal NutritionFeed EvaluationDietary Threonine RequirementNutritional ResponseDry DietIsocaloric DietsConversion RatioPhysiologyNutritional SciencesMetabolismNutrition Assessment
Indian major carp fingerling, Cirrhinus mrigala (3.85±0.75 cm, 0.52±0.21 g), were fed isonitrogenous and isocaloric diets (40% crude protein, 4.28 kcal g−1, gross energy) containing casein, gelatin and crystalline amino acids with graded levels of l-threonine (1.00, 1.25, 1.50, 1.75, 2.00 and 2.25 g 100 g−1, dry diet) to determine the dietary threonine requirement. The feeding trial was conducted in triplicate for 8 weeks. Diets were fed twice a day at 08:00 and 16:00 hours at 5% body weight day−1. The ration size and feeding schedule were worked out before the start of the feeding trial. Highest weight gain (304%) and best feed conversion ratio (1.43) were evident in fish fed diet containing 1.75% dietary threonine. Second-degree polynomial regression analysis of weight gain, feed conversion ratio and protein efficiency ratio data indicated the dietary threonine requirement to be at 1.84%, 1.81% and 1.78%, respectively, corresponding to 4.60%, 4.52% and 4.45% of dietary protein. Minimum carcass moisture, fat and maximum carcass protein were evident in fish fed 1.75% threonine level. However, ash content did not affect body composition, except the 1.00% threonine level, which showed a significantly higher ash content value. Based on the above results, it is recommended that the diet for C. mrigala should contain threonine at 1.80 g 100 g−1 dry diet, corresponding to 4.50 g 100 g−1 dietary protein for optimum growth and efficient feed utilization.
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