Article

The use of biorefinery by-products and natural detritus as feed sources for Oysters (Crassostrea gigas) juveniles

Details

Citation

Carboni S, Clegg SH & Hughes AD (2016) The use of biorefinery by-products and natural detritus as feed sources for Oysters (Crassostrea gigas) juveniles. Aquaculture, 464, pp. 392-398. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2016.07.021

Abstract
New research is currently underway to explore the potential of macroalgae for the production of biofuels. Marine biofuels in general and macroalgae in particular, offer a number of advantages over terrestrial biofuels including reduced competition for freshwater resources and for land use. Sugars can be extracted from macroalgae and processed into biofuels by anaerobic digestion and fermentation. This process generates significant waste biomass, which, if used, could improve the economic sustainability of the biorefinery sector. Bivalves’ aquaculture relies heavily on the production of unicellular algae to feed juvenile individuals and this can represent a bottleneck for the bivalve industry especially in locations where sunlight is limited. Previous research explored the use of macroalgae derived digestate as alternative or integrative feed for juvenile bivalves, exploiting the notion that organic particulate matter (detritus) is an integral part of this animal class natural diet. The prospect of using waste products from the emerging biorefinery industry to solve a bottleneck for aquaculture businesses and, by so doing, improving profitability of both, is an exciting one. In this paper we describe the main nutritional profiles (Protein, Lipid, Carbohydrates and Fatty acids) of the tested diets and investigate the potential for the use of a biorefinery a by-product as replacement option for bivalves’ production, by benchmarking it against aquaculture industry standards (live microalgae and commercially available algae paste) and natural detritus constituted by farmed sea urchin digesta. Both the digestate and the natural detritus supported the survival and growth of bivalve spat, especially when used at 50% inclusion rate, over the course of 4-week preliminary trials. Data suggest that a synergistic effect of the nutritional profiles of the diets employed may underpin the observed results.

Keywords
Oyster nutrition; Biorefinery; Single cell detritus; Sea urchin

Journal
Aquaculture: Volume 464

StatusPublished
Publication date01/11/2016
Publication date online20/07/2016
Date accepted by journal24/06/2016
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/23894
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0044-8486

People (1)

Dr Stefano Carboni

Dr Stefano Carboni

Aquatic Invertebrate Zoologist, Institute of Aquaculture

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