2005
DOI: 10.5657/fas.2005.8.3.138
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Effect of Partial Dietary Substitution of Meat Meal for Fish Meal on the Growth and Body Composition of the Juvenile Olive Flounder Paralichthys olivaceus

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Cited by 10 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Consequently, a variety of by‐products derived from terrestrial animal origins are being developed as a substitute for FM. Successful substitution of animal by‐product protein sources including meat and bone meal up to 180 g/kg (Kikuchi et al., 1997), meat meal with added amino acids (Sato & Kikuchi, 1997) and without addition of amino acids (Cho et al., 2005), up to 600 g/kg and 400 g/kg, respectively, and feather meal up to 400 g/kg for FM in diets (Kikuchi et al., 1994) have been made without retarding the growth of olive flounder. Lee et al.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Consequently, a variety of by‐products derived from terrestrial animal origins are being developed as a substitute for FM. Successful substitution of animal by‐product protein sources including meat and bone meal up to 180 g/kg (Kikuchi et al., 1997), meat meal with added amino acids (Sato & Kikuchi, 1997) and without addition of amino acids (Cho et al., 2005), up to 600 g/kg and 400 g/kg, respectively, and feather meal up to 400 g/kg for FM in diets (Kikuchi et al., 1994) have been made without retarding the growth of olive flounder. Lee et al.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, a variety of by-products derived from terrestrial animal origins are being developed as a substitute for FM. Successful substitution of animal by-product protein sources including meat and bone meal up to 180 g/kg (Kikuchi et al, 1997), meat meal with added amino acids and without addition of amino acids (Cho et al, 2005), up to 600 g/kg and 400 g/ kg, respectively, and feather meal up to 400 g/kg for FM in diets (Kikuchi et al, 1994) have been made without retarding the growth of olive flounder. Lee et al (2012) demonstrated that FM could be substituted with various animal protein sources (meat and bone meal and silkworm pupae meal up to 200 g/kg each or Promate meal ® up to 100 g/kg or combined silkworm pupae meal and Promate meal ® up to 100 g/kg) in diets without retarding growth of olive flounder in a 6-week feeding trial, in which fish were fed with the 600 g/kg FMbased diet or diets substituting FM with various sources of animal proteins at different levels.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Olive flounder, Paralichthys olivaceus , is one of the most commercially important marine fish species for aquaculture in the Eastern Asia over last decade because of its fast growth and high resistance against disease infection. Therefore, many feeding trials such as dietary nutrient requirements (Lee et al 2002a; Kim and Lee 2004), feeding regimes (Kim et al 2002a; Seo et al 2005; Cho 2005; Cho et al 2006), alternative animal and/or plant protein sources for fishmeal in the diets (Kikuchi et al 1997; Kikuchi 1999; Cho et al 2005a, 2005b), etc. have been performed.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because olive flounder, Paralichthys olivaceus , is one of the most commercially important marine fish species for aquaculture in Eastern Asia, such as Korea and Japan, many studies to determine dietary nutrient requirements (Lee et al 2000a; Alam et al 2002; Kim et al 2002a; Furuita et al 2003), alternative protein sources for fish meal (Kikuchi et al 1994a, 1994b; Sato and Kikuchi 1997; Kikuchi 1999; Cho et al 2005a, 2005b) in the diet, optimum feed allowance (Lee et al 1999, 2000b; Cho et al 2006a), and feeding strategy (Kim et al 2002b; Cho 2005; Cho et al 2006b) have been performed for effective fish production.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%