JOURNAL ARTICLE

Efficacy of Three Methionine Sources in Diets for Pacific White Shrimp, Litopenaeus vannamei

Ian ForsterWarren G. Dominy

Year: 2006 Journal:   Journal of the World Aquaculture Society Vol: 37 (4)Pages: 474-480   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

Abstract.— To examine the need for supplemental dietary methionine and to determine the ability of different methionine sources to meet this need for Pacific white shrimp, Litopenaeus vannamei , a growth trial was conducted. A control diet (30% crude protein) was formulated to be deficient in methionine by inclusion of high levels of dehulled, solvent‐extracted soybean meal and with no fish meal (methionine level was 0.45% of diet as fed, 1.5% of total amino acids). Three test diets were manufactured based on the control diet but supplemented with l ‐methionine, dl ‐methionine, or an analog of methionine (2‐hydroxy‐4‐methylthio butanoic acid [HMTBA], calcium salt) at the level of 0.5% as fed (equivalent to 1.5% of total amino acids). Cystine was constant among these diets at 0.5% of diet as fed. A commercial feed (30% crude protein) was included as a reference. The culture vessels were flat‐bottomed, cylindrical, black fiberglass tanks (1.5‐m diameter) initially filled with 1000 L seawater and supplied with aeration and seawater from a well at a rate of 2 L/min. At the end of the trial, all surviving shrimp were counted and weighed. The trial was run outdoors, with a mean water temperature of 25.9 C. The mean survival, final weight, growth rate, and feed efficiency of shrimp in the control group were 95.9%, 10.8 g, 0.93 g/wk, and 0.44 g/g, respectively. The mean values of all the test treatments were 96.9%, 11.6 g, 1.00 g/wk, and 0.47 g/g, respectively. The final weight and growth rate of shrimp fed the control diet were significantly lower than those of shrimp fed the methionine‐supplemented diets, indicating that this species has a requirement for dietary methionine. There were no significant differences ( P > 0.05) in any of the parameters among the test treatments, indicating that l ‐methionine, dl ‐methionine, and HMTBA can be used to meet the methionine requirement of this species under these experimental conditions. It is concluded that the three sources of methionine examined in this trial, l ‐methionine, dl ‐methionine, and HMTBA, are similar in their ability to meet the methionine requirement of this species.

Keywords:
Methionine Litopenaeus Shrimp Biology Fish meal Animal science Feed conversion ratio Food science Cystine Meal Seawater Amino acid Fishery Biochemistry Fish <Actinopterygii> Body weight Ecology Endocrinology Cysteine

Metrics

52
Cited By
2.43
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
17
Refs
0.89
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
Cassava research and cyanide
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Plant Science
Protein Hydrolysis and Bioactive Peptides
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.