dc.description.abstract |
Catla catla, a popular freshwater fish in South Asia, confronts escalating feed
costs, primarily from imported fishmeal. Local fishmeal, sourced from fish
waste, presents a cheaper but inferior alternative. To tackle this issue, the
study investigates utilizing gut wastes from sea cucumber processing in Sri
Lanka as feed for Catla catla farming. Sea cucumber waste, rich in protein,
offers a promising alternative while addressing environmental concerns
related to waste disposal. This study attempted to replace the fish meal with
dried powder prepared from Holothuria scabra gut waste in different ratios,
such as fish meal: dried sea cucumber gut powder 1:0, 1:1 and 0:1. Fish feed
was prepared using fishmeal and sea cucumber gut waste for feeding Catla
catla fry to the fingerling stage over 45 days in triplicate experiments.
Growth and survival rates were estimated at the end of the experiment. The
proximate composition of ingredients and the feeds was analyzed.
Differences in parameters were compared using ANOVA at a 5%
significance level. The survival rate was 100% for all treatments. The growth
parameters such as standard length, total length and body weight were
significantly higher (ANOVA, p<0.05) in the feed prepared with fishmeal
and sea cucumber gut waste powder at a 1:1 ratio and were selected as the
best feed ration Fry to juvenile stage of Catla catla. This study demonstrated
that unused intestinal wastes of sea cucumbers have added value as a fish
feed ingredient and can subsequently help manage waste disposal during sea
cucumber processing. |
en_US |