Comparisons on growth performance, survivability, organoleptic qualities and economic feasibility of asian seabass (Lates calcarifer) reared in different salinities

Mohammed Noorfaiz Yusof, and Norfazreena Mohd Faudzi, and Nur Aziemah Jasni, and Elexson Nillian, and Senoo, Shigeharu and Fui, Fui Ching (2024) Comparisons on growth performance, survivability, organoleptic qualities and economic feasibility of asian seabass (Lates calcarifer) reared in different salinities. Malaysian Applied Biology, 53 (1). pp. 127-136. ISSN 0126-8643

[img]
Preview
PDF
416kB

Official URL: https://jms.mabjournal.com/index.php/mab/issue/vie...

Abstract

Asian seabass, Lates calcarifer is among the most cultured aquaculture species in the Southeast Asian region due to its remarkable tolerance for a diverse environmental fluctuation. In aquaculture, salinity has a direct influence on many biological, physiological and market value of any cultured fish. This study investigated the impacts of different salinities (0, 15, & 30 ppt) on Asian seabass growth, body indices, feeding performance, organoleptic qualities, and production cost for 85 days. Ninety fish were reared in 700-liter tanks equipped with recirculation system with 10 fish each tank. They were fed with commercial marine feed. The findings revealed Asian seabass in 15 ppt attained significantly higher (p>0.05) body weight (470.40 ± 41.16 g), total length (31.51 ± 0.81 cm), total feed intake (309.28 ± 35.66 g/fish) and daily feed intake (3.64 ± 0.42 g/fish/day) compared to 30 ppt but remained insignificant with 0 ppt. Meanwhile, there was no significant difference (p0.05) compared to 15 ppt but remained insignificant with 0 ppt. Economically, Asian seabass cultured in 15 ppt yielded the most optimal conditions for profitable production. The findings conclude 15 ppt can promotes enhanced growth performance and profitability, while 0 ppt and 30 ppt can promote consumer acceptance positively.

Item Type:Article
Keywords:Asian seabass; Economic analysis; Growth performance; Lates calcarifer; Organoleptic qualities; Salinity
Journal:Malaysian Applied Biology Journal
ID Code:23572
Deposited By: Siti Zarenah Jasin
Deposited On:17 May 2024 07:08
Last Modified:17 May 2024 07:08

Repository Staff Only: item control page