&EFA
                                   United States
                                   Environmental Protection
                                   Agency
                                   Environmental Research
                                   Laboratory
                                   Narragansett Rl 02882
                                   Research and Development
                                  EPA-600/S3-81-049  Oct. 1981
Project  Summary
                                   Nutritional  Requirements  of
                                   Marine  Larval and
                                  Juvenile  Fish
                                   Kenneth L Simpson, Paul S.  Schauer, Cynthia R. Seidel, and Leslie M.
                                   Richardson
                                    This project summary describes and
                                   assesses the results of a cooperative
                                   research effort to evaluate a variety of
                                   diets and diet regimes for the labora-
                                   tory culture of a marine larval fish. The
                                   Atlantic silverside (Menidia menidia)
                                   was chosen for this study on the basis
                                   of  its regional availability,  ease of
                                   handling in the laboratory, and its use
                                   as a bioassay organism. A major aim of
                                   the study was to develop a diet that
                                   would provide good growth and sur-
                                   vival and provide a test fish similar to
                                   its wild counterpart.
                                    Initially, data were gathered on the
                                   composition of the silverside egg and
                                   wild fish, plankton, brine shrimp and
                                   various  commercial  and  modified
                                   diets.  Following an analysis of the diet
                                   components,  some  improvements
                                   were made in the artificial diets. Later
                                   studies concentrated on the effect of
                                   modified diets in relation to the feed-
                                   ing of brine shrimp nauplii.
                                    Silversides cultured  on  artificial
                                   diets generally had poor growth and
                                   survival rates.  Freeze-dried  brine
                                   shrimp [Artemis] nauplii and ground-
                                   up  adult silversides  also failed  to
                                   promote good growth and survival. A
                                   superior diet was provided by live, 3-
                                   day-old  brine shrimp nauplii. How-
                                   ever,  a combination  diet  of  brine
                                   shrimp and artificial  diets  provided
                                  , growth and survival more similar to
                                   the "all live" brine shrimp diet, even
                                   when  the live diet was fed only every
                                   eighth day.
                                    Biochemical data were compared to
                                   reported requirement levels for essen-
                                   tial amino acids and essential fatty
                                   acids in marine fish, and it was con-
                                   cluded that all diets seemed adequate
                                   in these two components. These data
                                   also indicated that fish accepted both
                                   artificial and live diets  equally. The
                                   characteristics  of the  storage  of
                                   dietary amino acids and dietary fatty
                                   acids in silversides  was assessed.
                                   Although the reason for the live diet's
                                   nutritive superiority remains unclear,
                                   several  recommendations  are
                                   presented.
                                     This Project Summary was develop-
                                   ed by EPA's Environmental Research
                                   Laboratory. Narragansett. Rl, to an-
                                   nounce key findings of the research
                                   project that is fully documented in a
                                   separate report  of the same title (see
                                   Project Report ordering information at
                                   back).

                                   Introduction
                                    The purpose of this study  was to
                                  formulate .an artificial diet for Atlantic
                                  silversides (Menidia menidia) such that
                                  this fish could be cultured as a repre-
                                  sentative test organism.  Toward this
                                  end,  a comprehensive  project was
                                  undertaken with the close cooperation
                                  of the  Tunison1,  URI2/ and  EPA
                                  laboratories3.
                                   'United States Fish and Wildlife Service. Tunison
                                   Laboratory of Fish Nutrition. Contend, NY 13045.
                                   'Department of Food Science & Food Technology.
                                   Nutrition and Dietetics. University of Rhode Is/and.
                                   Kingston. Rl 02881.
                                   'United States Environmental Protection Agency,
                                   Environmental Research Laboratory, Narragan-
                                   sett,  Rl 02882.

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  Atlantic  silversides are  euryhaline
fish of importance as forage for piscivor-
ous   fish  including  such  valuable
commercial species  as striped  bass,
bluefish, cod,  haddock,  mackerel, and
summer flounder. All life history stages
of silversides are found in the estuaries
along the Atlantic coast. The natural
diet of silversides includes algae,  detri-
tus and  zooplankton, such as megalopa
larvae, copepods, and mysids.
  The purpose  of  the  University  of
Rhode Island's part of the study was to
provide  biochemical evaluations of the
diets  and the  cultured organisms. The
diets were formulated to specifications
worked  out by URI, EPA and Tunison
laboratory personnel. The diets  came
from feeds formulated by the  research
group and by others (Tables 1A and 1B).
Composition of the  artificial diets and
the artificial  semi-purified diets are
shown in Tables 2 and 3.
  Initial studies concentrated on analy-
sis of the diet components and the wild
silverside eggs and adults. Later studies
concentrated on the effect of modified
diets  in  relation to the feeding of brine
shrimp nauplii.
  An  additional  diet,  the  Conklin
modified  lobster diet  (CMLD)  was
included in  only experiment  1  and was
only evaluated from a fatty acid point of
view  (Schauer and  Simpson, 1978).
Therefore, it was not included in the
general  diet treatment, although the
performance of this diet will be included
in the fatty acid results of  this year's
feeding  trials. The CMLD diet has been
proposed as a reference standard for
nutritional studies of invertebrates.
  Test fish in  experiment'  1  were 23
days old at the beginning of the experi-
ment  (17.6 ±  0.59 mg;  15.5 mm) and
they were fed the various diets for 24
days. In  experiment 2, fish were 59 days
old (92.8 ± 0.85 mg;  25.8 mm) at the
onset of the study  and were fed the
various  diets for 50 days.

Discussion  and  Results
  The joint research  project  between
the URI  and the EPA to determine some
nutritional requirements of the Atlantic
silverside was begun in  July 1975 and
concluded  in  January  1979. Experi-
ments were conducted in the summer of
each  research year  and the  samples
were  analyzed during the off-season.

Pre-Diet Testing Analyses
  Much of the first year's work con-
sisted of the  amino  acid analyses  of
various life stages of winter flounder
(Pseudopleuronectes americanus) and
a number of natural food organisms
known to be consumed during the early
life stages of wild marine fish. The basic
reason for the initial sample analyses
was to elucidate the amino acid pattern
of a number of marine organisms so that
an artificial diet of suitable quality could
be formulated.
                       Young winter flounder adults (16-1E
                     cm) varied little in amino acid contem
                     from the juveniles (4-5 cm). Plankton
                     collected  from  Narragansett  Bay
                     showed marked variations in amino acid
                     profiles. It was assumed that the levels
                     of amino acids in the winter flounder
                     eggs were optimum for growth. Based
                     upon the resemblance of the plankton
                     amino acid profile to that of the winter
Table 1A.    Treatments in 1977*

Treatment/Diet      Source and Description
1,  Artificial, Conklin
   modified lobster
   diet

2.  Artemia salina
   nauplii, live
3.  Starved

4.  Artificial, HPM-1
   (pellet form)

5.  Artificial, MF-1
   (flake form)
 University of California Bodega Marine Lab diet 76C. Ground to
 coarse powder passing through a 600-/jm mesh sieve.
 Nauplii hatched from San Francisco Bay brine shrimp, Artemia
 salina, eggs and harvested 72 hours after immersion of eggs in
 filtered seawater of 20-22°C and 31% salinity. Size approxi-
 mately 140-fjm x 400 fjm.

 Unfed.

 Cort/and modified practical diet with soy oil and fish oil. Ground
 to coarse powder passing through a  600-um mesh sieve.    >

 Closed formula prawn diet. Dr. S. Meyers, Louisiana State
 University. Ground to a coarse powder passing through a 600-
 fjm mesh sieve.
"For further description see Bengtson et a/., 1978.



Table 1B.    Description of Diets Used in 1977


Treatment/Diet     Description
       1



       2

       3

       4
Combination diet. Artificialpra wn flake diet MF-1 given for 3
consecutive days, live Artemia  salina 3-day nauplii substi-
tuted on the fourth day.

Live Artemia salina 3-day nauplii given every day.

Unfed.

Combination diet. Artificial salmonid flake diet HPM-1 and
live Artemia salina 3-day nauplii given on alternating days.

Combination diet. Artificial salmonid flake diet HPM-1 given
for 3 consecutive days, live Artemia salina 3-day nauplii
substituted on the fourth day.

Combination diet. Artificial salmonid flake diet HPM-1 given
for 7 consecutive days, live Artemia salina 3-day nauplii
substituted on the eighth day.
                                                                           4

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flounder egg, the plankton appeared to
be an excellent diet and was included as
a diet in study year 1976.


Feeding Studies
  The initial  study year was comprised
of two  separate  investigations.  One
study was undertaken to analyze the
effect of a continuous live brine shrimp
diet on larval 60+ day-old juveniles. The
second study was initiated to evaluate a
practical  commercial  hatchery  diet,
Cortland   1  (Tunison), which  was
formulated with respect to the nutri-
tional  requirements  of  a  freshwater
fish, the Atlantic salmon fry.
  The second year of the project (1976)
centered mainly on the chemical and
biochemical aspects of the diets fed and
Table 2.    Composition  of  Cortland
            (Tunison) Diet (HPM-1F)

                           Percent
Ingredient               Composition

Herring Meal              37.14
Soybean meal, 49%
 protein                     9.28
Corn gluten meal, 60%       9.28
Wheat middlings,
 standard                   8.36
Brewer's dried yeast         4.64
Dried whey                  4.64
Dried condensed fish
 solubles                    4.64
Meat and bone meal         4.64
Soybean oil, table grade *     4.64
Fish oil                     4.64
Mineral mixture^            0.37
Vitamin mixture^            0.56
Choline chloride, 70%       0.002
Niacinamide                 0.02
Starch, Instant Clear
 Jel, national                1.86
Lecithin                     1.86
Cholesterol                  0.19
Kelgin (HV) alginate          2.32
Sodium
 hexametaphosphate        0.93

'The soybean oil, fish oil, lecithin and cholesterol
were blended and added topremix simultaneously.
t Mixture provided the folio wing minerals fin gm/kg
of diet): magnesium sulfate,  1.78: potassium
iodate.0.0076; sodium selenite, 0.00027; zinc
sulfate. 0.4; ferrous sulfate, 0.3; cupric sulfate,
0 33; and manganous sulfate.  0.889.
^Mixture provided 13.800 IU Vitamin A palmitate;
5.500 IU Vitamin Da 100 IU Vitamin £, as dl-a-
tocopheryl acetate, and the folio wing amounts (mg)
of other vitamins per kg  of diet: Vitamin K as
Menadione   dimethylpyriminidol bisulfite, 30;
^hiamin-HCL, 28; d-biotin, 8; folic acid, 20; Vitamin
   , 0.003, mositol,  691; and ethoxyquin, 207.
the analysis of the fish cultured on these
diets. The diets consisted of wild plank-
ton,  brine  shrimp  nauplii (fresh and
freeze-dried), freeze-dried silversides,
Tetra  Marin, and four other artificial
diets. The latter four diets incorporated
changes  suggested by the first year's
trials (e.g.,  use of a marine oil and the
incorporation of  a semi-purified diet
with and without an amino acid supple-
ment).
   The diets fed in the two experiments
for the 1977 feeding trials are listed in
Tables 1A and 18, and included the live,
unfed 3-day-old  brine shrimp nauplii,
the Tunison flake diet (Table 2) and the
Meyers prawn diet  1023-77-1  (Table
3). The  other treatments  in  the two
experiments   consisted   of  feeding
regimes  of artificial diets with  brine
shrimp nauplii at  variable intervals. An
additional diet, the CMLD (Table 4) was
included  in only  experiment  1  (Table
 1A).
   The growth and survival data of silver-
sides in 1977 experiments 1  and 2 are
presented in Table 5 and Figure 1, re-
spectively.  In experiment 1, survival
was best on the  live brine shrimp diet,
slightly less on the combination diet and
poor on all artificial diets. Growth of the
brine shrimp (only) fed fish was signifi-
cantly better than in the combination
diet group, which in turn was signifi-
7able 3.    Composition of the Meyers
            Prawn Diet*-\

                          Percent
 Ingredient              Composition

 Shrimp   meal  (South)     15
 Fish meal                  14
 Fish protein concentrate     15
 Soy protein                 15
 Yeast protein                14
 Rice gel                      5
 Whey                        2
 Linolenic  acid                0.5
 Fish oil (menhaden)          4
 Cod liver oil                  1
 Soy oil                       2
 Cholesterol                  0.1
 Vitamin mix                  2
 Fish solubles                 5
 Lecithin                      2
 Kelgin                        2.5
 Sodium
  hexametaphosphate         1

 "of. I.B. Tarshis (1978).
 ^Proximate analysis- protein, 53.1%; fat,  11 7%;
  fiber, 4.7%; ash, 14.0%; carbohydrate, 16.5%(dry
  weight basis).
cantly better than any of the artificial
diets.
  The Conklin diet produced a survival
rate of 78.7%, although growth was the
poorest of all diet fed groups (22.8 ± 1.8;
17.3 mm).
  In experiment 2, Figure 1, survival
was equally high  in three of the diet
groups. These were brine shrimp alone,
Meyers diet + brine shrimp every 4th
day, and  Tunison diet + brine shrimp
every 4th day. Statistically, growth was
best, and similar,  on brine shrimp as a
single diet  source and Tunison diet +
brine shrimp every 2nd day.
  In the diet studies and in the combina-
tion live and artificial diet studies, silver-
sides actively consumed all diets which
seems to  eliminate leaching as a major
cause  of  nutritional incompleteness of
artificial  diets  or freeze-dried  brine
shrimp. If a critical nutrient was leached
out, feeding brine shrimp every 8th day
would give results similar to feeding an
artificial diet alone, which was not the
case. The reasonable growth and sur-
vival which resulted from feeding  brine
shrimp every  8th day  also  tends to
eliminate a  digestive enzyme as the key
growth factor since an enzyme would
not likely remain  active over an 8-day
                                           Table 4.     Composition of the Conklin
                                                        Modified Lobster Diet
Ingredient
Vitamin free casein
Cellulose
Wheat gluten
Brewer's Yeast
Lipid mix S*
Corn starch
Albumin
Salt mix. BTM-\
Vitamin mix D§
Choline chloride
Thiamin
Cholesterol
Rovimix E
Vitamin C
Percent
Composition
30.00
16.10
15.00
15.00
6.00
5.00
4.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
2.00
1.00
0.20
0.20
"Corn oil, 2 03%; cod liver oil, 3.96%; and ethoxy-
 qum* 0.01%.
Salt mixture in % of mix: CaCOa, 2.10%; Ca(POt)z
73.5%, citric acid,  0.21%; 2Cu2C HsOi-SHtO.
0.05%; FeCsHSOj-SHzO. 0.56%; MgO, 2.50%; Kl,
0.001%. KtHPOi 8.10%; KiSOt. 6.80%; NaCI,
3.06%; NatHPOt-2HzO, 21.4%; 7/V3 (CoWsCMj-
2H20, 0.13%; NaF, 0.02%; and CoC/2, 0.02%.
^Vitamin mixture in  % of mix: thiamin hydrochlo-
 ride,  0.32%; nboflavin,  0.72%;  niacinam/de,
 256%, biotin, 0.008%. Ca-Pantothenate, 1.44%.

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Table 5.    Summary of Results From Three Experiments to Evaluate Effects of Diet on Survival and Growth of the Atlantic
            Silverside
Treatment
Experiment Diet Diet1
1977-H 1 Conklin modified lobster 'diet
Artemia nauplii
HPM-1 pellet
HPM-1 flake
MF-1
Combination Artemia & MF-1
Amt. Fed.
% Wet Wt.
of Fish
10
10
10
10
10
10
Duration
(Days)
23
23
23
23
23
23
Age
of
Fish
24
24
24
24
24
24
Survival
(%)
79
93
47
43
45
88
Initial
Wt.
(mg)
17.8
17.8
17.8
17.8
17.5
17.8
Final
Wt.
(mg)
22.6
103.6
43.3
40.5
34.4
91.0
Gain %
Initial
Wt.
27.0
482.0
143.3
127.5
92.7
411.2
' Three replicates per treatment were provided Statistical analyses given in individual references noted elsewhere
   500 \—
   400
I
.c
<5
   300
•2> 200
I
    700
     0
            1         2                 4

Figure  1.    Interval between Artemia feedings (days).
period.  Freeze  drying would not sub-
stantially  destroy digestive enzymes,
amino acids or fatty acid components of
the brine shrimp, yet feeding  freeze-
dried brine shrimp gave results  equally
as  poor as feeding an artificial  diet
alone.  It  appears  unlikely from  our
present knowledge, therefore, that the
live brine shrimp is providing a digestive
enzyme, amino acid or fatty  acid to
silversides that is not being provided by
the artificial diets or freeze-dried brine
shrimp.
  Biochemical  analyses demonstrated
that the various test diets provided the
                                         majority of the 10essential amino acids
                                         in quantities at, or above those noted as
                                         adequate. The whole body amino acid
                                         profiles for every essential amino acid of
                                         all cultured fish were in excess of the
                                         minimum requirement levels. The dif-
                                         ferences  observed  in  growth   and
                                         survival of silversides cannot be attri-
                                         buted directly to amino acid deficiencies
                                         of the diet.
                                           It was shown that a combination of
                                         the Meyers  +  brine shrimp diet pro-
                                         duced  a  fatty acid spectrum in silver-
                                         sides which  was nearly identical to the
                                         average spectra of each single  'source
diet (Meyers alone; brine shrimp alone).
Two important differences were evident
between the  cultured and wild  fish
lipids. The first was that the cultured
fish contained a greater amount of the
16 and  18 carbon fatty acids, whereas
the wild fish contained more of the 20-
22  carbon polyunsaturated faty acids
(PUFA).  The  second major difference,
was that total lipid levels were substan-
tially higher in the cultured group than
in the wild fish group.
  Live brine shrimp have provided some
added   requirement for  maintaining
good survival. With this increased sur-
vival,  the  nutritional requirements of
marine  larval fish  can now be more
accurately  evaluated by feeding modi-
fied artificial diets. It would appear that
brine  shrimp  cannot be totally elimi-
nated from the dietary regime  of the
larval fish, but they can  be more  con-
servatively utilized.
  It is thus possible to supplement the
fatty acid content  of the brine shrimp so
that the resulting  fish  does  survive,
grow  and  more  closely  resemble the
natural (wild) fish  than do fish grown on
only the live brine shrimp nauplii. This
can be done without having to maintain
the fish on a total live diet.

Conclusions
  The intent of this project, started in
1975, was to provide an artificial diet
that would give good growth and surviv-
al of test fish. Generally speaking, all of
the artificial diets—commerciaf or pre-
pared,  flaked  or  pelleted,  and  freeze-
dried silversides or brine  shrimp—gave
poor survival and/or growth. Only li
brine shrimp nauplii, or a combination'

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of an artificial diet with brine shrimp
nauplii, gave acceptable survival and
growth.  Nevertheless,  brine  shrimp
feedings resulted in a test organism that
did not resemble its wild counterpart in
biochemical composition.  However, a
combination feeding of an artificial diet
and brine shrimp gave good survival and
growth and appeared to correct some of
the deficiencies of brine shrimp alone.
While  the  silversides were not com-
pletely "weaned" from  the expensive
(time and cost) brine shrimp, at least it
was minimized.
  Because of the importance of Anemia
nauplii  in feeding laboratory fish the
authors and the EPA group embarked on
a  study of  brine  shrimp cysts. At a
conference  at  Szymbark,  Poland,  in
September 1977, where some of these
artificial diet data were  presented, an
International  Study of  Anemia  (ISA)
group  was  formed.  This group  was
formed in response to the obvious need
to study the properties of brine shrimp,
in  general,  and  some  commercial
strains, in  particular.  The same close
cooperative effort between the EPA and
URI laboratories in the first project con-
tinued into the second. The comparative
studies on the five geographical strains
of brine shrimp were  presented at the
1st  International Symposium  on
Anemia (1979, Corpus  Christi,  TX)  in
seven papers from the two laboratories.
The results showed clearly that there is
wide variation  in  the brine shrimps'
ability to support the life and growth  of
test organisms and also a variation  in
their chemical composition. The cause
of the variability-of biological value  of
brine shrimp is the subject of further
investigation between the two labora-
tories.
Kenneth L.  Simpson, Paul S. Schauer.  Cynthia  R.  Seidel, and  Leslie M.
  Richardson are with the Department of Food Science and Nutrition.  University
  of Rhode Island, Kingston, Rl 02881.
Allan D. Beck is the EPA Project Officer (see below).
The complete report, entitled "Nutritional Requirements of Marine Larval and
  Juvenile Fish," (Order No. PB 81 -248 130; Cost: $8.00, subject to change) will
  be available only from:
        National Technical Information Service
        5285 Port Royal Road
        Springfield, VA 22161
        Telephone:  703-487-4650
The EPA Project Officer can be contacted at:
        Environmental Research Laboratory
        U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
        South Ferry Road
        Narragansett, Rl 02882
                                  U S GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE; 1981 — 559-017/7370

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Information
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