Grubišić, M.R.

Link to this page

Authority KeyName Variants
fdbc865b-ff84-4295-9289-c7003bba2283
  • Grubišić, M.R. (1)
Projects
No records found.

Author's Bibliography

Importance of zooplankton as live feed for carp larvae

Grubišić, M.R.; Dulić, Zorka; Stanković, Marko; Živić, Ivana; Bjelanović, Katarina; Spasić, M.M.; Marković, Zoran

(6th Central European Congress on Food, CEFood 2012, 2012)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Grubišić, M.R.
AU  - Dulić, Zorka
AU  - Stanković, Marko
AU  - Živić, Ivana
AU  - Bjelanović, Katarina
AU  - Spasić, M.M.
AU  - Marković, Zoran
PY  - 2012
UR  - http://aspace.agrif.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2778
AB  - Zooplankton is a very important source of natural food for larvae of many aquaculture species. In semi-intensive systems, which are the dominant type of carp production, many fish species feed on both zooplankton and zoobenthos as adults, while larvae and fry rely mostly on zooplankton. It provides them with high quality nutrients and other molecules such as proteolitic enzymes, hormones and growth factors, which support digestive processes in immature larval gut. Larviculture, especially start feeding of early larval stages, appear to be a critical point in fish culturing. However, artificial diets formulated for larvae show poor digestibility. Use of live feed of small dimensions, good nutritive characteristics and locomotion that provides visual stimulus, overcome that problem. Zooplankters commonly used for mass production as live feed for fish larvae are Rotifers (Brachionus plicatilis and B. calyciflorus) and brine shrimp (Artemia salina). Shortly after hatching, carp larvae are transferred to nursing ponds for further rearing. Ponds are previously prepared through agrotechnical measures in order to provide nutrient enrichment and stimulate production. During the first days of exogenous feeding, larvae consume only the smallest zooplankters such as Rotifers and naupliar larvae of Copepods, while later they move on to bigger pray as Cladocerans. However, due to variable environmental conditions, predation, competition or infections in earthen ponds, mortality in nursing ponds is often very high, reaching over 90%. Thereby, modern approach suggests rearing in indoor tanks in controlled systems and use of automatic feeding systems to provide precise portions of zooplankton.
PB  - 6th Central European Congress on Food, CEFood 2012
C3  - CEFood 2012 - Proceedings of 6th Central European Congress on Food
T1  - Importance of zooplankton as live feed for carp larvae
EP  - 1557
SP  - 1553
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_2778
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Grubišić, M.R. and Dulić, Zorka and Stanković, Marko and Živić, Ivana and Bjelanović, Katarina and Spasić, M.M. and Marković, Zoran",
year = "2012",
abstract = "Zooplankton is a very important source of natural food for larvae of many aquaculture species. In semi-intensive systems, which are the dominant type of carp production, many fish species feed on both zooplankton and zoobenthos as adults, while larvae and fry rely mostly on zooplankton. It provides them with high quality nutrients and other molecules such as proteolitic enzymes, hormones and growth factors, which support digestive processes in immature larval gut. Larviculture, especially start feeding of early larval stages, appear to be a critical point in fish culturing. However, artificial diets formulated for larvae show poor digestibility. Use of live feed of small dimensions, good nutritive characteristics and locomotion that provides visual stimulus, overcome that problem. Zooplankters commonly used for mass production as live feed for fish larvae are Rotifers (Brachionus plicatilis and B. calyciflorus) and brine shrimp (Artemia salina). Shortly after hatching, carp larvae are transferred to nursing ponds for further rearing. Ponds are previously prepared through agrotechnical measures in order to provide nutrient enrichment and stimulate production. During the first days of exogenous feeding, larvae consume only the smallest zooplankters such as Rotifers and naupliar larvae of Copepods, while later they move on to bigger pray as Cladocerans. However, due to variable environmental conditions, predation, competition or infections in earthen ponds, mortality in nursing ponds is often very high, reaching over 90%. Thereby, modern approach suggests rearing in indoor tanks in controlled systems and use of automatic feeding systems to provide precise portions of zooplankton.",
publisher = "6th Central European Congress on Food, CEFood 2012",
journal = "CEFood 2012 - Proceedings of 6th Central European Congress on Food",
title = "Importance of zooplankton as live feed for carp larvae",
pages = "1557-1553",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_2778"
}
Grubišić, M.R., Dulić, Z., Stanković, M., Živić, I., Bjelanović, K., Spasić, M.M.,& Marković, Z.. (2012). Importance of zooplankton as live feed for carp larvae. in CEFood 2012 - Proceedings of 6th Central European Congress on Food
6th Central European Congress on Food, CEFood 2012., 1553-1557.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_2778
Grubišić M, Dulić Z, Stanković M, Živić I, Bjelanović K, Spasić M, Marković Z. Importance of zooplankton as live feed for carp larvae. in CEFood 2012 - Proceedings of 6th Central European Congress on Food. 2012;:1553-1557.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_2778 .
Grubišić, M.R., Dulić, Zorka, Stanković, Marko, Živić, Ivana, Bjelanović, Katarina, Spasić, M.M., Marković, Zoran, "Importance of zooplankton as live feed for carp larvae" in CEFood 2012 - Proceedings of 6th Central European Congress on Food (2012):1553-1557,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_agrospace_2778 .
2