Rate and efficiency of organic carbon assimilation by aquacultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra

Diet assimilation rate is crucial to the growth and survival of Holothuria scabra juveniles during culture. To understand the assimilation rate and efficiency we assess organic carbon assimilation, which is closely related to the growth and source of variations in diet. We conducted a two-factor exp...

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Main Authors: Wahyudi, A'an Johan, Indriana, Lisa Fajar, Muhammad Firdaus, Prayitno, Hanif Budi, Meirinawati, Hanny
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2022
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21008/1/SBL%202.pdf
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Institution: Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
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spelling my-ukm.journal.210082023-02-03T07:23:37Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21008/ Rate and efficiency of organic carbon assimilation by aquacultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra Wahyudi, A'an Johan Indriana, Lisa Fajar Muhammad Firdaus, Prayitno, Hanif Budi Meirinawati, Hanny Diet assimilation rate is crucial to the growth and survival of Holothuria scabra juveniles during culture. To understand the assimilation rate and efficiency we assess organic carbon assimilation, which is closely related to the growth and source of variations in diet. We conducted a two-factor experiment, i.e., juvenile origin (cultured and wild H. scabra juveniles), and diet treatment (one control with no additional diet, and three additional diets, i.e., rice bran, dried cow manure, and seagrass Enhalus acoroides extract). We monitored the amounts of each diet that the juveniles consumed and the fecal pellets they egested. The diet, sediment, body walls, and organic carbon content of the fecal pellets were measured using an elemental analyzer combined with an isotope ratio mass spectrometer. Exponential growth was seen in the juveniles fed with rice bran, which had a fecal pellet egestion of 0.12–0.21 gC/d. Stable isotope analysis showed that the contribution of the diet proportion to the growth of the sandfish did not exceed 30%. The range of the assimilation rate was 35.3–62.4 gC/d. The average assimilation efficiency of organic carbon was 43.6 ± 27.7% (max 57.9%). Considering the assimilation rate and efficiency, we suggest a feeding interval of once every two days or twice per week at a rate of 3–5% of the total H. scabra biomass for a juvenile culture system. Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2022 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21008/1/SBL%202.pdf Wahyudi, A'an Johan and Indriana, Lisa Fajar and Muhammad Firdaus, and Prayitno, Hanif Budi and Meirinawati, Hanny (2022) Rate and efficiency of organic carbon assimilation by aquacultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra. Sains Malaysiana, 51 (11). pp. 3523-3537. ISSN 0126-6039 http://www.ukm.my/jsm/index.html
institution Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
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country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
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language English
description Diet assimilation rate is crucial to the growth and survival of Holothuria scabra juveniles during culture. To understand the assimilation rate and efficiency we assess organic carbon assimilation, which is closely related to the growth and source of variations in diet. We conducted a two-factor experiment, i.e., juvenile origin (cultured and wild H. scabra juveniles), and diet treatment (one control with no additional diet, and three additional diets, i.e., rice bran, dried cow manure, and seagrass Enhalus acoroides extract). We monitored the amounts of each diet that the juveniles consumed and the fecal pellets they egested. The diet, sediment, body walls, and organic carbon content of the fecal pellets were measured using an elemental analyzer combined with an isotope ratio mass spectrometer. Exponential growth was seen in the juveniles fed with rice bran, which had a fecal pellet egestion of 0.12–0.21 gC/d. Stable isotope analysis showed that the contribution of the diet proportion to the growth of the sandfish did not exceed 30%. The range of the assimilation rate was 35.3–62.4 gC/d. The average assimilation efficiency of organic carbon was 43.6 ± 27.7% (max 57.9%). Considering the assimilation rate and efficiency, we suggest a feeding interval of once every two days or twice per week at a rate of 3–5% of the total H. scabra biomass for a juvenile culture system.
format Article
author Wahyudi, A'an Johan
Indriana, Lisa Fajar
Muhammad Firdaus,
Prayitno, Hanif Budi
Meirinawati, Hanny
spellingShingle Wahyudi, A'an Johan
Indriana, Lisa Fajar
Muhammad Firdaus,
Prayitno, Hanif Budi
Meirinawati, Hanny
Rate and efficiency of organic carbon assimilation by aquacultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra
author_facet Wahyudi, A'an Johan
Indriana, Lisa Fajar
Muhammad Firdaus,
Prayitno, Hanif Budi
Meirinawati, Hanny
author_sort Wahyudi, A'an Johan
title Rate and efficiency of organic carbon assimilation by aquacultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra
title_short Rate and efficiency of organic carbon assimilation by aquacultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra
title_full Rate and efficiency of organic carbon assimilation by aquacultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra
title_fullStr Rate and efficiency of organic carbon assimilation by aquacultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra
title_full_unstemmed Rate and efficiency of organic carbon assimilation by aquacultured juvenile sandfish Holothuria scabra
title_sort rate and efficiency of organic carbon assimilation by aquacultured juvenile sandfish holothuria scabra
publisher Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
publishDate 2022
url http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21008/1/SBL%202.pdf
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21008/
http://www.ukm.my/jsm/index.html
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