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Bioenergetics of captive Pacific bluefin tuna (Thunnus orientalis).

Authors :
Estess, Ethan E.
Coffey, Daniel M.
Shimose, Tamaki
Seitz, Andrew C.
Rodriguez, Luis
Norton, Alex
Block, Barbara
Farwell, Charles
Source :
Aquaculture. Oct2014, Vol. 434, p137-144. 8p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Tuna bioenergetics can be described by the following relationship: the energy available for growth is equal to the food energy minus all metabolic costs. These costs include routine metabolic rate, specific dynamic action, increased activity level, eliminated waste, and gonadal development. Captive populations of Pacific bluefin tuna ( Thunnus orientalis ) were held at ~ 20 °C in fiberglass tanks and fed on a regular schedule with a diet formulated to achieve an energetic content of 176 ± 36 kJ · kg − 1 of biomass · day − 1 (mean ± s.d.). To conduct a bioenergetic study, growth rates during the captive period and tissue energy values post-mortem were empirically determined. Daily growth rates were obtained from a von Bertalanffy growth function based on curved fork length (CFL) measurements of live fish and post-mortem morphometrics. The parameters obtained for the captive bluefin growth function were 225.13 cm straight fork length (SFL), 0.173, and − 0.497 years for L ∞ , k , and t o , respectively. The growth equation, SFL = 225.13 · (1 − e (− 0.173(t-(− 0.497))) ) in conjunction with the length-mass regression (where body mass M = 4.98 × 10 − 6 × SFL 3.3186 ) gave a daily growth increase of 32.60 ± 2.40 g · day − 1 for Pacific bluefin tuna of 2.2 years of age and 11.4 ± 1.0 kg (the average age and mass of a fish in the study). The average tissue energy value from four sampled tuna was 7.66 ± 0.40 kJ · g − 1 , and applying the daily growth increase estimate provides a daily energy gain of 249.7 kJ, which is 12.4% of an ingested meal's total energy content. A food conversion ratio of 17.8:1 is estimated for a meal consisting solely of sardines and 22.6:1 for a mixed diet consisting of sardines, squid, and a gelatin-vitamin mixture at the stated feeding regimen. This paper presents the first data on actual food conversion ratios and bioenergetic utilization for Pacific bluefin tuna. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00448486
Volume :
434
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Aquaculture
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
99061466
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2014.08.002