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Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms

Year 2011, Volume: 11 Issue: 4, - , 01.08.2011

Abstract

One of the important cultivable indigenous finfish which deserves immediate attention for commercial scale seed production and farming is the snakehead, Channa striatus. Provision of suitable live feed is the bottleneck in rearing larvae of this fish. Culture performance of larval snakehead was examined in the present study by feeding them with cladocerans (Ceriodaphnia cornuta, Moina micrura and Daphnia carinata) and Artemia nauplii as individual and mixed cladoceran diet (C. cornuta, M. micrura and D. carinata) for four weeks. Fish fed Artemia nauplii, C. cornuta and mixed cladocerans showed higher weight gain (15.88±0.11 mg), (9.72±0.04 mg) and (10.0 ± 0.06 mg) respectively during the Ist week. Fish fed C. cornuta and M. micrura showed better weight gain (12.88 ± 0.21 mg) and (11.90±0.09 mg) respectively during the 2nd week. Fish fed on mixed cladocerans showed better survival and growth with less cannibalism in the last three weeks. Fish fed Artemia nauplii showed less growth and more cannibalism during the last two weeks. It is concluded that C. striatus larvae could be fed cladocerans both individually as well as in mixed preparation during their early life stages. The nauplii of the brine shrimp Artemia which are extensively used in hatcheries are exotic and highly priced resulting in higher cost of seed production. Use of cladocerans for early larval rearing of C. striatus will reduce the expenditure for seed production. It is also observed that with the increase in age and growth, the fish prefers large sized prey than the smaller ones. Cannibalism can be reduced at different stages by providing prey of suitable size to the growing fish

Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms

Year 2011, Volume: 11 Issue: 4, - , 01.08.2011

Abstract

One of the important cultivable indigenous finfish which deserves immediate attention for commercial scale seed production and farming is the snakehead, Channa striatus. Provision of suitable live feed is the bottleneck in rearing larvae of this fish. Culture performance of larval snakehead was examined in the present study by feeding them with cladocerans (Ceriodaphnia cornuta, Moina micrura and Daphnia carinata) and Artemia nauplii as individual and mixed cladoceran diet (C. cornuta, M. micrura and D. carinata) for four weeks. Fish fed Artemia nauplii, C. cornuta and mixed cladocerans showed higher weight gain (15.88±0.11 mg), (9.72±0.04 mg) and (10.0 ± 0.06 mg) respectively during the Ist week. Fish fed C. cornuta and M. micrura showed better weight gain (12.88 ± 0.21 mg) and (11.90±0.09 mg) respectively during the 2nd week. Fish fed on mixed cladocerans showed better survival and growth with less cannibalism in the last three weeks. Fish fed Artemia nauplii showed less growth and more cannibalism during the last two weeks. It is concluded that C. striatus larvae could be fed cladocerans both individually as well as in mixed preparation during their early life stages. The nauplii of the brine shrimp Artemia which are extensively used in hatcheries are exotic and highly priced resulting in higher cost of seed production. Use of cladocerans for early larval rearing of C. striatus will reduce the expenditure for seed production. It is also observed that with the increase in age and growth, the fish prefers large sized prey than the smaller ones. Cannibalism can be reduced at different stages by providing prey of suitable size to the growing fish

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Details

Primary Language Turkish
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Mehrajuddin War This is me

Kareem Altaff This is me

Mohammed Abdulkhader Haniffa This is me

Publication Date August 1, 2011
Published in Issue Year 2011 Volume: 11 Issue: 4

Cite

APA War, M., Altaff, K., & Haniffa, M. A. (2011). Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 11(4).
AMA War M, Altaff K, Haniffa MA. Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. August 2011;11(4).
Chicago War, Mehrajuddin, Kareem Altaff, and Mohammed Abdulkhader Haniffa. “Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa Striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms”. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 11, no. 4 (August 2011).
EndNote War M, Altaff K, Haniffa MA (August 1, 2011) Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 11 4
IEEE M. War, K. Altaff, and M. A. Haniffa, “Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms”, Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, vol. 11, no. 4, 2011.
ISNAD War, Mehrajuddin et al. “Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa Striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms”. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 11/4 (August 2011).
JAMA War M, Altaff K, Haniffa MA. Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 2011;11.
MLA War, Mehrajuddin et al. “Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa Striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms”. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, vol. 11, no. 4, 2011.
Vancouver War M, Altaff K, Haniffa MA. Growth and Survival of Larval Snakehead Channa striatus (Bloch, 1793) Fed Different Live Feed Organisms. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 2011;11(4).