Aquatic Animal Nutrition FAS 2240C - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 41
About This Presentation
Title:

Aquatic Animal Nutrition FAS 2240C

Description:

also, various reprints of peer review journal articles. on reserve: ... analysis: nothing toxic in tissues. reality: vitamin deficiency ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:187
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: pals5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Aquatic Animal Nutrition FAS 2240C


1
Aquatic Animal NutritionFAS 2240C
2
Course Syllabus
  • Study of aquatic animal nutrition
  • bioenergetics
  • digestion/digestive anatomy/metabolism
  • nutrient classes/sources/requirements
  • formulation/feedstuffs
  • manufacturing processes
  • practical pond feed management

3
Syllabus
  • Animals covered variety of finfish and
    crustacean species
  • textbook none are current or adequate
  • also, various reprints of peer review journal
    articles
  • on reserve
  • De Silva, S.S., and T.A. Anderson, 1995. Fish
    nutrition in aquaculture
  • Lovell, T., 1989. Nutrition and feeding of fish
  • DAbramo, Conklin and Akiyama, 1992. Crustacean
    Nutrition
  • Halver, J., 1988. Fish Nutrition
  • Maynard and Loosli, 1969. Animal Nutrition

4
Syllabus grading
  • Lecture Exams 1, 2, 3 60
  • Term paper (journal format) 20
  • Journal article critiques (5 x 4 pts) 20

5
Schedule of Topics
  • Day Topic/Activity
  • 8/25 Introduction, general concepts, animal body
    and its food
  • 9/1 Digestion and metabolism
  • 9/8 Chemoattraction
  • 9/15 Bioenergetics
  • 9/22 Exam 1
  • 9/29 Proteins and amino acids, structure and
    essentiality
  • 10/6 Protein and energy issues
  • 10/13 Lipids and carotenoids
  • 10/20 Carbohydrates and vitamins
  • 10/27 Exam 2
  • 11/3 Feed ingredients, physical characteristics,
    storage
  • 11/10 Feed formulation, manufacture and fish meal
    replacement
  • 11/17 Feed management and growth issues
  • 11/24 Thanksgiving
  • 12/1 Nutritional research methods, current areas
    of research

6
Todays Lecture 8/25/05
  • Part 1 Introduction (Maynard et al. Lovell)
  • What is nutrition???
  • History of nutrition
  • Nutrition today
  • Nutrient essentiality
  • Part 2 The animal body and its food (Maynard,
    et al. Lovell)
  • Aquatics vs. terrestrials

7
What is Nutrition?
  • Nutrition the provision of all indispensable
    nutrients in adequate amounts to insure proper
    growth and maintenance of body functions
  • involves various chemical reactions and
    physiological transformations which convert foods
    into body tissues and activities
  • involves ingestion, digestion and absorption of
    various nutrients
  • transport into cells
  • removal of unusable elements and waste products
    of metabolism

8
History of Nutrition I
  • Lavoisier is generally credited as being the
    father of nutrition
  • until the first quarter of 19th Century, we
    thought the nutritive value of food resided only
    in one component
  • near the end of the 19th Century research started
    to focus primarily on the need for protein,
    lipids and carbohydrates
  • minerals were considered important, but their
    essentiality was unknown

9
History of Nutrition II
  • Tremendous expansion in the 20th Century with the
    discovery of vitamins, role of amino acids, more
    minerals
  • the body is now known to need more than 40
    nutrients for normal growth and maintenance
  • what have been the reasons for these advances???
  • Human nutritional/health problems
  • also, basic studies of the functioning of the
    animal organism supplemented research

10
History of Nutrition III
  • Example of historical nutritional research
  • heifers fed wheat-based diets produced calves at
    lower rates than those fed corn diets
  • assumption something toxic in wheat
  • analysis nothing toxic in tissues
  • reality vitamin deficiency
  • scientific methods for formulating feeds were
    inadequate
  • research diets eventually simplified/purified

11
History of Nutrition IV
  • First vitamin discovered in 1913
  • pioneer nutritional work achieved primarily
    through the use of animal subjects
  • same today, but with restrictions
  • rats ? vitamins, amino acids, minerals
  • dogs ? insulin, nicotinic acid
  • guinea pigs ? prevention of scurvy
  • chicks ? thiamin and other vitamins
  • bacteria ? growth factors, nutrient function in
    metabolism
  • final answers must be derived from species studied

12
Nutrition Today
  • Animal nutrition today is multidisciplinary
  • metabolism physiologists, biochemists
  • vitamins organic chemists
  • isotopes/chromatography physicists
  • protein structure molecular biochemists
  • breed variation geneticists
  • vitamins/amino acids microbiologists
  • additives/improved digestibility food
    technologists

13
Issue Overexpansion
  • Everyone now-a-days appears to be an expert in
    nutrition
  • infomercials, algae, diet fads
  • claims of superiority without scientific evidence
    (science vs. pseudoscience)
  • example massive doses of vitamins are useless,
    often toxic
  • nutrition industry might need to become more
    conservative
  • its no wonder why the average consumer is
    puzzled!!

14
Nutrient Essentiality
  • essential nutrient one that must be provided in
    the diet in order to insure adequate growth and
    maintenance, indispensable
  • Nutrient categories macro and micro
  • macronutrients protein, lipid, carbohydrate,
    etc.
  • micronutrients trace metals, vitamins
  • important molecular weight is not the basis,
    requirement level is
  • proteins g/kg vitamins µg/kg
  • large requirement doesnt imply greater
    importance (example Se in sheep 0.1 mg/day)

15
Basic Nutritional Concepts
  • Animal nutrition is tied back to food crops and
    ultimately to the nutritive value of soil
  • strong interrelationship between human and animal
    nutrition
  • foods/feeds of both contain similar nutrients
  • metabolic processes are basically similar
  • nutritional niche of animals animals
    concentrate nutrients of food crops into more
    nutritious and palatable forms for humans
  • point animals take sources unsuitable for
    humans and improve their quality for us!

16
Animals as Primary Consumers
  • Animals produce meat, milk, etc. on land that is
    often unsuitable for production of food crops
  • problem overall land availability vs. protein
    demand
  • fisheries flat, agriculture barely keeping up
  • nutrition has greatly improved production
    capacity, however it is not going to be enough

17
What Does it All Mean?
  • Agriculture is barely keeping up with world food
    demand and
  • Fisheries are being improperly managed to the
    point of steady state
  • Either we must quickly apply Iowa corn field
    technology to all arable land on Earth or food
    must be found from other sources
  • One possible option is aquaculture.

18
Current Challenges/Problems
  • For aquaculture to contribute more to the worlds
    food supply, production must be intensified
  • higher yields must be achieved in ponds
  • better and more predictable natural sources of
    nutrition (natural productivity) must be
    available (too unpredictable)
  • more crude feed materials used as supplements or
  • compounded feeds must provide all nutrients
  • retention vs. digestibility Which is best metric?

19
Part 2 The Animal Body and Its Food
  • From Lovell and Maynard, et al.

20
Learning Objectives
  • Aquatics, compared to terrestrials, are typically
    better converters of nutrients into body tissue
  • This does not apply in all cases to all nutrients

21
Aquatics vs. Terrestrials feeding issues
  • Aquatics are what they are submerged in water
  • as opposed to land culture of animals, the
    water itself can serve as a source of nutrition
    (natural productivity)
  • overfeeding of land animals does not necessarily
    imply ruining of their environment
  • in water, nutrients are quickly lost if feed is
    not immediately consumed
  • waste is not readily observable, thus, attraction
    and palatability of aquatic feeds is important

22
Aquatics vs. Terrestrials nutrient requirements
  • Overall qualitative requirement is generally
    similar
  • energy requirements are lower for fish than most
    terrestrials ? higher protein energy ratio
  • marine fish/shrimp require some fatty acids and
    sterols that terrestrials dont
  • aquatics have reduced dietary mineral requirement
    (environment is nutrient source)
  • some fish/most crustaceans have limited ability
    to synthesize ascorbic acid
  • shrimp cannot synthesize cholestrol molecule

23
Aquatics vs. Terrestrials nutrient requirements
  • Nutrient requirements for one group of finfish or
    crustaceans can only serve as a starting point
    for other species
  • lysine example
  • nutrient requirements will ultimately become more
    and more refined
  • problem apparent vs. true requirement

24
(No Transcript)
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
(No Transcript)
31
(No Transcript)
32
Percent Composition of Aquatics
Animal Water Protein Fat Ash
Channel catfish, muscle 77.30 16.30 5.40 1.10
Artemia nauplii 89.09 6.29 1.40 1.02
White shrimp 90.00 7.17 0.50 1.30
33
(No Transcript)
34
(No Transcript)
35
(No Transcript)
36
(No Transcript)
37
(No Transcript)
38
(No Transcript)
39
(No Transcript)
40
(No Transcript)
41
For Next Time
  • Digestion and Metabolism
  • Read Gibson, R. 1983. Feeding and Digestion in
    Decapod Crustaceans. Pages 59-70 in Proceedings
    of the 2nd International Conference on
    Aquaculture Nutrition Biochemical and
    Physiological Approaches to Shellfish Nutrition,
    Pruder, G.D., Langdon, C., Conklin, D. (Eds.).
    World Mariculture Society, Baton Rouge,
    Louisiana, USA,
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com