By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Researchers at Mississippi State University who are
trying to formulate the best diet for catfish have found a
protein mix that seems to be the most efficient. Protein
is added to catfish diets from either plant or animal
sources. Catfish need protein for the same reasons every
other living thing needs protein -- bodies cannot make
certain amino acids needed to function and must get these
from food. The
animal protein added to catfish diets is usually fish meal,
meat and bone/blood meal, or poultry meal. The primary plant
source of protein is soybeans. Corn and wheat are mainly
used for energy, but they also supply some
protein. Ed
Robinson, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment
Station researcher, and Meng Li, MAFES associate research
professor, studied protein types and amounts in catfish
diets. The studies were conducted at Mississippi State
University's Delta Research and Extension Center in
Stoneville. To
bring the highest profit to catfish producers, they found
success in a diet of 28 percent protein with little or none
of it animal protein. "Producers
typically feed a diet of 32 percent protein, but the
research shows a diet of 28 percent protein is more than
adequate," Robinson said. "A diet of 28 percent protein is
the most economical for growth for fish from 6 inches long
to harvest, which is about two pounds." Robinson
said feed is the single largest production cost for raising
catfish, accounting for about 50 percent of the variable
operating costs. Catfish feed is made primarily of soybean
meal, with corn, wheat, fish meal and sometimes cottonseed
meal. Vitamins, minerals and fat are added to the
feed. To test
the diets, researchers stocked fingerling catfish into 60,
one-tenth acre ponds. They were placed in the ponds at
either 6,000, 12,000 or 18,000 fish per acre, creating three
stocking densities. The
fish were fed once a day on one of four diets for two
growing seasons. The diets contained either 28 or 32 percent
protein, with or without animal protein. "Results
show that there were no differences in any variable except
for visceral fat and fillet fat between fish fed the 28
percent and the 32 percent protein diets," Robinson
said. Research
results show producers can save $8 to $10 a ton by switching
to a 28 percent protein diet from one that includes 32
percent. Robinson called this savings significant, saying
that a farmer with 500 water acres could save as much as
$25,000 a year by reducing the costs of feed. "That
would pay someone's labor for the year," Robinson said. "If
we can't save money on the feed, the research doesn't make
any difference." In
addition to studying the amount of protein in diets, the
research looked at whether the type of protein made a
difference in catfish growth. Robinson said that while young
catfish fry, or those less than 6 inches long, need animal
protein, catfish being grown out for harvest perform equally
well on plant and animal protein. Plant
protein is almost always cheaper than animal protein, but
the reformulated diet keeps a bit of animal protein in as a
safety margin. "We
were trying to reduce the amount of animal protein needed in
catfish diets," Robinson said. "Even though animal protein
may be a little higher quality than plant protein, you can
balance the plant protein and still get the same benefit in
the catfish." Released:
Aug. 5, 2002
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
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Catfish
farming...
Less protein
still makes
good diet
Contact: Dr. Ed Robinson, (662) 325-8687
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:31:56
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw02/020805.html
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