|
|
| |
Open Marine Archive |
log in |
|
| Effect of non-terminal starvation and two levels of dietary soybean phosphatidylcholine on the growth, survival, and fatty acid composition of juvenile Penaeus vannamei Boone |
| Camara, M.R.; Coutteau, P.; Sorgeloos, P. (1995). Effect of non-terminal starvation and two levels of dietary soybean phosphatidylcholine on the growth, survival, and fatty acid composition of juvenile Penaeus vannamei Boone, in: Lavens, P. et al. (Ed.) (1995). Larvi '95: Fish & Shellfish Symposium, Gent, Belgium, September 3-7, 1995. EAS Special Publication, 24: pp. 200-203 |
| In: Lavens, P.; Jaspers, E.; Roelants, I. (Ed.) (1995). Larvi '95: Fish & Shellfish Symposium, Gent, Belgium, September 3-7, 1995 EAS Special Publication, 24 European Aquaculture Society: Gent. ISBN 90-71625-14-1. XXVI, 521 pp., meer |
| In: EAS Special Publication. European Aquaculture Society, meer |
| Ook gepubliceerd als |
- Camara, M.R.; Coutteau, P.; Sorgeloos, P. (1995). Effect of non-terminal starvation and two levels of dietary soybean phosphatidylcholine on the growth, survival, and fatty acid composition of juvenile Penaeus vannamei Boone, in: (1995). IZWO Coll. Rep. 25(1995). IZWO Collected Reprints, 25: pp. chapter 3 [Subsequent publication], meer
|
| Trefwoorden |
Penaeus vannamei [WoRMS]; Marien |
| Abstract |
Dietary phospholipids and particulary phosphatidylcholine have been found to enhance growth and survival in penaeid shrimp, an effect which has been attributed to their limitedability to synthesize phospholipids de novo. however, most of the studies made so far have used low purity phospholipids and therefore, precise requirements for dietary phosphatidylcholine among several species of shrimps have been difficult to establish. As part of a broad study which aims to study lipid nutrition in penaeid shrimp, the dietary effect of purified phosphatidylcholine (PC) on growth, survival, stress resistance and body lipid composition of post-larval Penaeus vannamei fed semi-purified microbound diets was evaluated. Changes on the body lipid classes and fatty acid compositions P. vannamei were studied and associated with changes in growth rates. The results indicate a phosphatidylcholine requirement for growth of postlarval P. vannamei of approximately 1.5 or 6.5%, respectively, of 95% pure or 23% pure PC. |
|
|