Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9448776 Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 2005 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
Natural carotenoids from astaxanthin containing alga Haematococcus pluvialis (H) and a non-astaxanthin carotenoid-containing alga Spirulina pacifica (S), and a synthetic astaxanthin Carophyll Pink (A) were supplemented in formulated diets at two concentrations, 50 (I) and 100 (II) mg kg−1, resulting in seven pigmented diets HI, SI, AI, HII, SII, AII, and HS (H-50 mg kg−1+S-50 mg kg−1). Formulated diet without carotenoid supplementation served as a control (C). The different diets were fed to juvenile kuruma prawn Marsupenaeus japonicus for 9 weeks. Dietary carotenoid effects on survival, growth, and pigmentation were compared by the treatment individually or collectively. A low dissolved oxygen stress test was conducted 2 weeks later and prawns' survival time and oxygen consumption rate were also compared among treatments. After 9 weeks' rearing, C-fed prawn had significantly lower survival rate than the pigmented diets-fed prawns. No difference in weight gain was found among all prawns. C-fed prawn had 66.4% less flesh astaxanthin (FA) and 75.5% less shell astaxanthin (SA) than the pigmented diets-fed prawns. I-fed (AI, HI, and SI) prawns had 31.1% less FA and 29.6% less SA than II-fed (AII, HII, SII, and HS) prawns. No significant differences were found in the comparisons by other categories. The use of these three sources of carotenoids for pigmentation in crustacean was discussed along carotenoid conversion, deposition, digestibility, and absorption. When subjected to low dissolved oxygen stress, C-fed prawn had higher oxygen consumption rate (OCR) and shorter survival time (ST) than the prawns fed the pigmented diets. No differences in OCR or ST were found in the comparisons by other categories.
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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Aquatic Science
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