Fish as feed inputs for aquaculture: practices, sustainability and implications

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Use of wild fish and other aquatic organisms as feed in aquaculture in the Asia-Pacific 79


of importing nations. With an exception of a study carried out in Bangladesh (Kader,
Hossain and Hasan, 2005), such investigations on feed quality are rather uncommon
and have to be intensified and, where appropriate, more stringent regulations
introduced with respect to types of feed ingredients and their quality. A schematic
representation of the efficacy of the broad feed types on the growth of cultured stocks
is shown in Figure 8.


3.3 Ingredients used
The ingredients utilized in fishfeed production vary widely depending on the feed
type, the cultured stock(s) and the farmers’ financial limitations. Basically, they range
from agricultural and animal industry by-products to fishmeal and fish oil, among
others. A detailed account of the availability of commonly used ingredients and the
type of usage in Asian aquaculture, particularly of agricultural by-products, has been
presented elsewhere (Tacon, 1987; Hertrampf and Pascual, 2000; De Silva and Hasan,
2007; Hasan et al., 2007).



  1. 4 Use of fish and other aquatic products in aquaculture
    Fish used directly and/or reduced into a form such as fishmeal or fish oil to feed
    cultured stocks are referred to as trash fish/low-value fish. Recently it has been pointed
    out that the use of the term “trash fish” is misleading and that a better term would be
    “low-value fish”, which has been defined as “fish that are generally of relatively low
    economic value and typically small sized; they can be used for human consumption or
    as animal feeds (both fish and livestock); they may be used directly in both aquaculture
    to feed other fish or processed into fishmeal/oil for incorporation into formulated diets;
    the same is true for human food, where the fish may be consumed directly, or further
    processed often using traditional methods of processing small fish” (Sugiyama, Staples
    and Funge-Smith, 2004). Trash fish/low-value fish have also been defined as: “Fish that
    have a low commercial value by virtue of their low quality, small size or low consumer


FIGURE 8
A conceptual representation of the effectiveness of fertilizers and different feed
types on production

Source: De Silva and Hasan (2007)
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