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5 September, 2008



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Researchers develop salmon feed that strengthens immune system

19 June, 2008 -

SCIENTISTS at Nofima have developed a salmon feed that strengthens the immune defence of salmon so the survival rate after a natural outbreak of the IPN virus increases "dramatically".
Professor Kjell-Arne Rørvik at Nofima Marine (formerly Akvaforsk) believes this is an example of the fish feed of the future.
"The best way of significantly improving fish feed involves finding and utilising components that collaborate with the fish's biology so that the energy in the feed is better utilised."
When salmon weigh around 100 grams and are ready to be transferred to sea cages, they are referred to as smolt.
It is clear that the biology is challenged when the salmon smolt are transferred from fresh water to sea water.
This major readjustment means the smolt have a poor appetite and the intake of energy-rich feed is often insufficient to maintain a good immune defence.
The smolt enters a period of several weeks' duration with reduced weight and increased susceptibility to sickness.
The infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN) virus is one of the aquaculture industry's major health challenges.
The disease particularly affects smolt in the first weeks after transfer to salt water.
One method to enable smolt to have sufficient energy to fight off the disease is to add bioactive fatty acids to the feed.
Tetradecylthioacetic acid (TTA) increases the salmon's ability to oxidize fat to energy.





TTA has been tested on humans and is known as a remedy that reduces cholesterol, improves immune defence and increases the capacity for fat oxidation.
Scientists Kjell-Arne Rørvik and Magny Thomassen conducted TTA trials on smolt.
The smolt were divided into three groups with each group receiving a different feed, one of which contained small amounts of TTA.
While in the sea cages, the salmon were exposed to a natural outbreak of IPN.
As a result of the outbreak, the scientists recorded clear differences between the groups of fish that had consumed different feeds.
The results showed that the fish that consumed the feed containing TTA had a mortality rate of 2.3% compared to 7.8% for the fish that consumed normal feed.
"To a fish farmer, a reduction like this equates to good fish welfare," says Rørvik.
"It will also be a major advancement if the industry can implement this simple step to reduce the mortality rate in the early sea phase."
This is a user-controlled innovation project part funded by the Research Council of Norway in collaboration with BioMar and Thia Medica.
Before TTA may be utilised commercially, it must gain EU approval as an additive.


www.fishfarmer-magazine.com is published by Special Publications. Special Publications also publishes FISHupdate.com, FISHupdate magazine, Fish Farmer, the Fish Industry Yearbook, the Scottish Seafood Processors Federation Diary, the Fish Farmer Handbook and a range of wallplanners.

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Calendar
06 - 09 September, 2008
International Conference on Fish Diseases and Fish Immunology
15 - 18 September, 2008
AQUACULTURE EUROPE 2008
29 September - 01 October, 2008
Aqua Vision 2008
07 - 09 October, 2008
Conxemar
12 - 14 October, 2008
8th International Symposium in Tilapia on Aquaculture
23 - 24 October, 2008
Annual Association of Scottish Shellfish Growers International Conference
05 - 07 November, 2008
IMPASSE Conference “Managing Alien Species for Sustainable Development of Aquaculture and Fisheries”
25 - 27 November, 2008
ASIAFISH 2008
15 - 18 February, 2009
Aquaculture America 2009
25 - 29 May, 2009
WORLD AQUACULTURE 2009
Click here to see all 11 events
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