z-logo
Premium
Effect of dietary taurine enhancement on growth and development in red sea bream Pagrus major larvae
Author(s) -
Kim YangSu,
Sasaki Tsukasa,
Awa Masato,
Inomata Maho,
Honryo Tomoki,
Agawa Yasuo,
Ando Masashi,
Sawada Yoshifumi
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
aquaculture research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.646
H-Index - 89
eISSN - 1365-2109
pISSN - 1355-557X
DOI - 10.1111/are.12573
Subject(s) - biology , taurine , pagrus major , hatching , larva , zoology , turbot , nucleic acid , biochemistry , fishery , fish <actinopterygii> , amino acid , ecology
This study investigated the effect of feedings taurine‐enriched rotifers on the growth and development of larval red sea bream ( RSB ). Rotifers incubated in taurine‐enriched water at a taurine concentration of 800 mg L −1 (T‐800) and 0 mg L −1 (T‐0) were fed to larvae from 3 to 20 days after hatching ( DAH ). Notochord length, body weight and specific growth rate of T‐800 group were significantly greater than those of T‐0 at 14, 17, 9–11 and 18–20 DAH . Taurine content of larvae in the T‐800 group increased rapidly from 11 DAH and thereafter remained significantly higher than T‐0. Flexion larvae firstly appeared in both groups at 8 DAH , however, at 20 DAH post‐flexion larvae were significantly more abundant in T‐800 than T‐0. While nucleic acid and protein contents (μg mg −1 wet fish) showed remarkable changes, ontogenetic growth in RSB larvae stage was observed to switch from hyperplastic growth to hypertrophic growth with the start of the flexion stage. Although a similar change in nucleic acid contents was observed between the two groups, the protein content (μg fish −1 ) and protein/ DNA ratio of T‐800 remained higher than that of T‐0 during the hypertrophic growth period. These results suggest that dietary taurine accelerates the growth and development in RSB larvae especially during hypertrophic growth (flexion stage) after the early hyperplastic growth.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here