Improved floating diets for African catfish and Nile tilapia
Flotation potentialities of diets bound with Polymethylo-cabarmide and other local starches and Saccharomyces cerevisiae floater were investigated in the laboratory. The binders and floater were fixed at 10 and 4% respectively in isonitrogenous 30% crude protein diets for catfish and Tilapia. Flotation were significantly (P<0.05) highest (100.00 - 96.67%) in Polymethylo-cabarmide based binder. Wheat grains starch (WGS) was highest (p>O.05) among the local agents in the first 10 minutes. Cassava tuber starch (CTS) significantly (P<0.05) succeeded WGS from 15 minutes till end of immersion. The least effective was maize grain starch (MGS).
Main Authors: | , , , |
---|---|
Format: | conference_item biblioteca |
Language: | English |
Published: |
FISON
2009
|
Subjects: | Aquaculture, Nigeria, New Bussa, Floating Fish Feed, freshwater environment, Feed, Feed composition, Feeding experiments, Feeding, Artificial feeding, Nutrition, |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/1834/38110 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
id |
dig-aquadocs-1834-38110 |
---|---|
record_format |
koha |
spelling |
dig-aquadocs-1834-381102021-07-14T02:20:22Z Improved floating diets for African catfish and Nile tilapia Falayi, B.A. Sadiku, S.O.E. Lamai, S.L. Tsadu, S.M. Aquaculture Nigeria New Bussa Floating Fish Feed freshwater environment Feed Feed composition Feeding experiments Feeding Artificial feeding Nutrition Flotation potentialities of diets bound with Polymethylo-cabarmide and other local starches and Saccharomyces cerevisiae floater were investigated in the laboratory. The binders and floater were fixed at 10 and 4% respectively in isonitrogenous 30% crude protein diets for catfish and Tilapia. Flotation were significantly (P<0.05) highest (100.00 - 96.67%) in Polymethylo-cabarmide based binder. Wheat grains starch (WGS) was highest (p>O.05) among the local agents in the first 10 minutes. Cassava tuber starch (CTS) significantly (P<0.05) succeeded WGS from 15 minutes till end of immersion. The least effective was maize grain starch (MGS). Includes:- 1 table.;1 fig.;19 refs. 2021-06-24T18:10:06Z 2021-06-24T18:10:06Z 2009 conference_item TRUE http://hdl.handle.net/1834/38110 en http://www.fison.org.ng/ application/pdf application/pdf 73-75 FISON Akure (Nigeria) http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/23386 19325 2018-04-10 16:51:37 23386 Fisheries Society of Nigeria |
institution |
UNESCO |
collection |
DSpace |
country |
Francia |
countrycode |
FR |
component |
Bibliográfico |
access |
En linea |
databasecode |
dig-aquadocs |
tag |
biblioteca |
region |
Europa del Oeste |
libraryname |
Repositorio AQUADOCS |
language |
English |
topic |
Aquaculture Nigeria New Bussa Floating Fish Feed freshwater environment Feed Feed composition Feeding experiments Feeding Artificial feeding Nutrition Aquaculture Nigeria New Bussa Floating Fish Feed freshwater environment Feed Feed composition Feeding experiments Feeding Artificial feeding Nutrition |
spellingShingle |
Aquaculture Nigeria New Bussa Floating Fish Feed freshwater environment Feed Feed composition Feeding experiments Feeding Artificial feeding Nutrition Aquaculture Nigeria New Bussa Floating Fish Feed freshwater environment Feed Feed composition Feeding experiments Feeding Artificial feeding Nutrition Falayi, B.A. Sadiku, S.O.E. Lamai, S.L. Tsadu, S.M. Improved floating diets for African catfish and Nile tilapia |
description |
Flotation potentialities of diets bound with Polymethylo-cabarmide and other local starches and Saccharomyces cerevisiae floater were investigated in the laboratory. The binders and floater were fixed at 10 and 4% respectively in isonitrogenous 30% crude protein diets for catfish and Tilapia. Flotation were significantly (P<0.05) highest (100.00 - 96.67%) in Polymethylo-cabarmide based binder. Wheat grains starch (WGS) was highest (p>O.05) among the local agents in the first 10 minutes. Cassava tuber starch (CTS) significantly (P<0.05) succeeded WGS from 15 minutes till end of immersion. The least effective was maize grain starch (MGS). |
format |
conference_item |
topic_facet |
Aquaculture Nigeria New Bussa Floating Fish Feed freshwater environment Feed Feed composition Feeding experiments Feeding Artificial feeding Nutrition |
author |
Falayi, B.A. Sadiku, S.O.E. Lamai, S.L. Tsadu, S.M. |
author_facet |
Falayi, B.A. Sadiku, S.O.E. Lamai, S.L. Tsadu, S.M. |
author_sort |
Falayi, B.A. |
title |
Improved floating diets for African catfish and Nile tilapia |
title_short |
Improved floating diets for African catfish and Nile tilapia |
title_full |
Improved floating diets for African catfish and Nile tilapia |
title_fullStr |
Improved floating diets for African catfish and Nile tilapia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Improved floating diets for African catfish and Nile tilapia |
title_sort |
improved floating diets for african catfish and nile tilapia |
publisher |
FISON |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1834/38110 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT falayiba improvedfloatingdietsforafricancatfishandniletilapia AT sadikusoe improvedfloatingdietsforafricancatfishandniletilapia AT lamaisl improvedfloatingdietsforafricancatfishandniletilapia AT tsadusm improvedfloatingdietsforafricancatfishandniletilapia |
_version_ |
1756079714974302208 |