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The effect of plant protein‐based diets on apparent nutrient digestibility, growth response, egesta quantity, postprandial ammonia excretion rate and serum quality of Nile tilapia
Author(s) -
Duodu Collins Prah,
AdjeiBoateng Daniel,
Amponsah Andoh Kwaku,
Andrews Pearl,
Obirikorang Kwasi Adu
Publication year - 2020
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.14464
Subject(s) - nile tilapia , biology , dry matter , zoology , excretion , nutrient , postprandial , tilapia , net protein utilization , ammonia , meal , feed conversion ratio , feces , plant protein , digestion (alchemy) , weight gain , oreochromis , protein efficiency ratio , food science , body weight , fish <actinopterygii> , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , endocrinology , chemistry , ecology , fishery , chromatography , insulin
The study assessed the effect of oilseed meal mixtures on the biological value, faecal matter output, ammonia excretion rates and serum biochemistry of Nile tilapia over 63 days. The experimental diets (PPB 1, PPB 2 and PPB 3) were formulated using four selected oilseed meals that were mixed in different protein proportions to contribute 80% of total dietary crude protein. In each diet, either one or two of the oilseed meals were the dominant protein contributor. A commercial tilapia feed was used as the control diet (CTRL). Sex‐reversed Nile tilapia fingerlings (35 g) were stocked at 20 fish per tank in a recirculation system and fed at 3% body weight of their respective diets. At the end of the study, ADCs of dry matter, crude lipid and ash were significantly ( p  < .05) lower in all the plant‐based diets compared with the control diet. Fish fed the control diet had significantly higher weight gain and SGR compared with the plant‐based diets. Egesta output was 127% higher in the plant‐based diets compared with the control diet. All dietary treatments exhibited a similar trend in changes in ammonia nitrogen. Nevertheless, serum metabolites levels indicated no significant differences among treatments. Although the PPBs did not affect ADC of protein and serum profile, fish growth was reduced while faecal output increased.

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