Italian Journal of Animal Science (Apr 2010)

Effect of stocking density and protein/fat ratio of the diet on growth of Dover sole (Solea solea)

  • A. Nizza,
  • F. Morra,
  • A. Guglielmelli,
  • E. Badini,
  • S. Marono,
  • G. Piccolo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4081/ijas.2007.1s.816
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1s
pp. 816 – 818

Abstract

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250 soles (30g initial weight) were randomly placed in 12 experimental tanks at the Discizia’s aquaculture marine station. They were reared at 2 different stocking densities (2.3 and 1.3kg/m2 corresponding to 40% and 25% of the bottom surface area covered by fish) and fed on 2 diets with different protein/fat ratio (50% and 54% crude protein and 21% and 18% total lipid, respectively for diets A and B) with triplicate tanks per treatment. The trial lasted 120 days. Fish stocked at the lower density resulted in significantly higher weight gain than fish reared at 2.3 kg/m2 (29.0±7.3 g vs 20.3±8.0g; P<0.01) with a specific growth rate (SGR) of 0.54±0.09 and 0.42±0.13, respectively. Feed conversion rate (FCR) was improved at the lower density (1.8 vs 2.4, P<0.01). The chemical composition of the test diets significantly affected the growth performance of sole. Diet B led to a higher final weight (59.7 vs 50.8g; P<0.01) and better feed utilisation (FCR: 1.8 vs 2.4, P<0.01). These results confirm the necessity to ensure an adequate space for the growing sole and suggest the need for high protein diets to meet sole’s requirements.

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