2017
DOI: 10.1111/anu.12527
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Evaluation of dietary taurine concentrations in microparticulate diets provided to larval California yellowtail (Seriola dorsalis ) postlarvae

Abstract: Taurine is an important amino acid derivative for marine and freshwater fish, especially during early development. We investigated the range of taurine concentrations that influence the growth and survival rates of California yellowtail (CYT; Seriola dorsalis) during transition from live feeds to microparticulate diets, as well as the extent to which nutrient leaching from the microparticulate diets affects these ranges. We tested particle‐assisted rotationally agglomerated (PARA) particles with four levels of… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 50 publications
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“…Satriyo et al (2017) suggested that a minimum level of 0.45% of taurine is required in the diet with washed fishmeal as a main protein source to normalize the physiological conditions of juvenile totoaba, namely green liver, low gallbladder-somatic index (GBSI), low plasma total cholesterol, low lipid digestibility, low erythrocyte turnover and low visceral fat content. With most of the cases utilizing more content than the optimal level, dietary taurine has no or negative effects on fish (Hu et al 2018b;Stuart et al 2018;Zheng et al 2016). So, the current knowledge about the optimum dietary taurine levels is highly important for aquaculture as well as for future research.…”
Section: Growth Performancementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Satriyo et al (2017) suggested that a minimum level of 0.45% of taurine is required in the diet with washed fishmeal as a main protein source to normalize the physiological conditions of juvenile totoaba, namely green liver, low gallbladder-somatic index (GBSI), low plasma total cholesterol, low lipid digestibility, low erythrocyte turnover and low visceral fat content. With most of the cases utilizing more content than the optimal level, dietary taurine has no or negative effects on fish (Hu et al 2018b;Stuart et al 2018;Zheng et al 2016). So, the current knowledge about the optimum dietary taurine levels is highly important for aquaculture as well as for future research.…”
Section: Growth Performancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Excessive dietary taurine (2%) had negative effects on survival, growth and the enzyme activities (Zheng et al 2016). However, even 12.2% of dietary taurine had no significant negative effects on the growth, survival and feed consumption rates of California yellowtail (Seriola dorsalis) postlarvae (Stuart et al 2018). Certainly, more research is needed to evaluate the potential nutrient toxicity of elevated dietary taurine concentrations for fish larvae.…”
Section: Reproductive and Larval Performancesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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