JOURNAL ARTICLE

Apparent digestibility of feedstuffs by the marine shrimp Penaeus vannamei BOONE.

Dean M. AkiyamaSilvio Roméro de Carvalho CoelhoA. L. LawrenceEdward Robinson

Year: 1989 Journal:   NIPPON SUISAN GAKKAISHI Vol: 55 (1)Pages: 91-98   Publisher: Springer Science+Business Media

Abstract

The apparent dry matter digestibility (ADMD), apparent protein digestibility (APD), and apparent amino acid digestibility (AAAD) of thirteen feedstuffs used for marine shrimp diets were determined for the marine shrimp, Penaeus vannamei. The feedstuffs evaluated were casein, corn starch, gelatin, soy protein, wheat gluten, fish meal, rice bran, shrimp meal, soybean meal, squid meal, cellulose, chitin, and diatomaceous sand. Each feedstuff comprised 88% of the experimental diets. The ADMD values ranged from 91.4% to -21.4%. The purified feedstuffs were more efficiently digested than the practical feedstuffs. The dietary fillers (cellulose, chitin, and diatomaceous sand) were either poorly digested or not digested.The APD values ranged from 99.1% to 3.0%. There were no differences in APD due to animal or plant feedstuff origin. The AAAD were determined for arginine, lysine, leucine, isoleucine, threonine, valine, histidine, phenylalanine, glutamate, aspartate, glycine, proline, serine, tryrosine, and alanine. The digestibility trends observed for APD were similar for AAAD. The high AAAD for chitin suggested that the low APD was due to the low digestibility of the amine fraction of the chitin structure and not a low protein digestibility. Arginine, lysine, and glutamate were most efficiently digested, while alanine had the lowest apparent digestibility value.

Keywords:
Shrimp Food science Biology Fish meal Chitin Soybean meal Valine Penaeus Bran Amino acid Biochemistry Fishery Ecology

Metrics

154
Cited By
2.49
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
3
Refs
0.87
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Aquaculture Nutrition and Growth
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Aquatic Science
Crustacean biology and ecology
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Ecology
Food and Agricultural Sciences
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Food Science
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.