<b>Nile tilapia culture under feeding restriction in bioflocs and bioflocs plus periphyton tanks

Intensive aquaculture systems may cause pollution in water bodies because their effluents have high levels of nutrients. The use of substrates for periphyton and the manipulation of the C: N ratio of water are technologies that can be employed to increase aquaculture yield with environmental sustain...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Davi de Holanda Cavalcante, Francisco Roberto dos Santos Lima, Vanessa Tomaz Rebouças, Marcelo Vinícius do Carmo e Sá
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Editora da Universidade Estadual de Maringá (Eduem) 2017-07-01
Series:Acta Scientiarum: Animal Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://periodicos.uem.br/ojs/index.php/ActaSciAnimSci/article/view/33574
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Summary:Intensive aquaculture systems may cause pollution in water bodies because their effluents have high levels of nutrients. The use of substrates for periphyton and the manipulation of the C: N ratio of water are technologies that can be employed to increase aquaculture yield with environmental sustainability. The present study has aimed at determining whether feeding restriction could stimulate a greater use of natural food in three different Nile tilapia rearing systems (green water, bioflocs and biophyton), without growth performance impairment. There were nine treatments with four replicates each one (36 experimental units). The animals were raised in conventional (green water) tanks, C: N-ratio adjusted tanks (bioflocs) and bioflocs + periphyton integrated tanks (biophyton). In each culture system, the artificial diet was delivered regularly or under two levels of restriction (15 and 30%). In conventional tanks, fish growth performance was reduced by feeding restriction. Ammonia and nitrite were reduced in bioflocs tanks. Underwater structures for periphyton were not able to increase ammonia and nitrite removal. In bioflocs tanks, feeding restriction of 15% did not lessen fish weigh gain. Underwater structures for periphyton have not improved fish growth performance in any aspect.
ISSN:1806-2636
1807-8672