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Use of marine yeasts as an avilable diet for mass cultures of Moina macrocopa SCIE SCOPUS

Title
Use of marine yeasts as an avilable diet for mass cultures of Moina macrocopa
Authors
Kang, CKPark, HYKim, MCLee, WJ
Date Issued
2006-09-01
Publisher
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Abstract
A 4-week feeding trial was conducted to test the use of marine yeasts purified from seawater and sediments as a dietary source in cultivating a cladoceran, Moina macrocopa, a potential alternative live food for fish larvae. Optimal growth conditions of two yeast strains were obtained for NaCl concentration, pH and temperature. Moina macrocopa was cultivated using different diets: marine yeasts (Debaryomyces hansenii Yeast-14 and Candida austromarina Yeast-16) and a commercial diet (Erythrobacter sp. S pi-I). The essential amino acids of both the yeast strains were nearly as great as those in M. microcopa. Further, the yeast-fed M. macrocopa had essential amino acid profiles similar to the documented values for rotifers and Artemia enriched in microalgae and commercial diets. Erythrobacter sp. S pi-I lacked n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, 20:5n-3 and 22:6n-3, which were also low but detected in both yeasts. An increase in the 20:5n-3 [eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA)] and 22:6n-3 [docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)] levels, compared with the levels in yeast strains themselves, was more pronounced in the 22:6n-3 level of Moina fed the C. austromarina, resulting in a high DHA:EPA ratio. When the Moina diets were switched, their delta C-13 values shifted gradually towards the values of the switched diets. Diet switch from Erythrobacter sp. S pi-I to C. austromarina Yeast-16 resulted in a more rapid turnover of Moina tissue carbon than that in the inverse case. When fed a mixed diet, the delta C-13 values of Moina tissue approached the value of marine yeasts immediately. These temporal changes in the delta C-13 values of Moina tissue indicate the preferential ingestion of marine yeasts and a selective assimilation of the carbon originated from marine yeasts. These findings suggest that marine yeasts, particularly C. austromarina Yeast-16, are highly available to mass cultures of M. macrocopa, providing better nutritional and dietary values than the commercial diet (Erythrobacter sp. S pi-I).
Keywords
Moina macrocopa; marine yeast; diet; fatty acids; DHA/EPA; amino acids; stable isotopes; mass culture; ROTIFER BRACHIONUS-PLICATILIS; UNSATURATED FATTY-ACIDS; TURBOT SCOPHTHALMUS-MAXIMUS; FISH LARVAE; BIOMASS PRODUCTION; AMINO-ACID; LIVE FOOD; ARTEMIA; MICROALGAE; ENRICHMENT
URI
https://oasis.postech.ac.kr/handle/2014.oak/25112
DOI
10.1111/J.1365-2109.2006.01553.X
ISSN
1355-557X
Article Type
Article
Citation
AQUACULTURE RESEARCH, vol. 37, no. 12, page. 1227 - 1237, 2006-09-01
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강창근KANG, CHANG KEUN
Dept. Convergence IT Engineering
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