Title
How many meals a day to minimize cannibalism when rearing larvae of the Amazonian catfish Pseudoplatystoma punctifer ? the cannibal's point of view
Date Issued
01 October 2011
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Baras E.
Silva Del Aguila D.
Montalvan Naranjos G.
Dugué R.
Renno J.
Nuñez J.
Abstract
Meal frequency is a key parameter in fish larviculture, especially in highly cannibalistic species. Knowledge of the biological bases of cannibalism (growth capacity of cannibals, morphological constraints on cannibalism, prey size preference) can help predicting the risks of cannibalism for different feeding schedules under culture conditions. This study relied on the day-by-day analysis of prey size preference and bioenergetics of individual cannibals of the catfish Pseudoplatystoma punctifer (8-65 mm standard length, SL, 0.5-400 mg dry mass, DM) at 28.5 °C under 12L:12D. The results were equated with the ontogenetic variations of morphological factors (head and mouth width) and feed efficiency of larvae feeding on Artemia nauplii, in order to calculate the risks of cannibalism among fish fed 2-7 daily meals. The predation capacities of P. punctifer were highest at 8 mm SL and decreased in larger fish (largest prey = 86% and 70% SL in fish of 8 and >30 mm SL, respectively). Cannibals of increasing size preferred increasingly smaller prey relative to their own size, but also to their predation capacities. These morphological and behavioural constraints were largely compensated for by bioenergetics performance. Cannibals consumed high daily food rations (as high as 171 and 29% DM in fish <1 and >300 mg DM, respectively), exhibited high gross conversion efficiencies (0.50-0.55 and about 0.70, in fish <1 and >30 mg DM, respectively), and grew rapidly (90 and 18% DM day -1 in fish <1 and >300 mg DM, respectively). The growth advantage of cannibals over siblings fed Artemia nauplii was decisive, except for high meal frequencies (6-7 daily meals). This study supports the view that the risk of cannibalism and adequate feeding strategies can be largely predicted in a particular fish species if the morphological, behavioural and bioenergetics bases of cannibalism are examined altogether in an ontogenetic perspective. © 2011 EDP Sciences, IFREMER, IRD.
Start page
379
End page
390
Volume
24
Issue
4
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento
Biología marina, Biología de agua dulce, Limnología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84858231690
Source
Aquatic Living Resources
ISSN of the container
17652952
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus