Ethanol could aid fish farming
AUBURN, ALA.
October 19, 2007
7:22am
• Might lower the cost of fish production
• Distillers grain not just for cows any more
Fish feed is a major expense for many aquaculture operations but new research indicates there might be help from an unlikely source: ethanol.
Agricultural Research Service scientists say ethanol co-products can provide protein for fish feeds at a lower cost than the soybean-corn combinations commonly used.
The recent proliferation of ethanol processing facilities has led to a surplus of distiller's dried grains with solubles, or DDGS -- a nutrient-rich processing co-product that is often used to feed livestock.
The business plans of Central Valley ethanol makers call for selling their distillers grain to the region’s diary operations.
DDGS is relatively protein-rich and lacks some of the undesirable characteristics that make many plant protein sources less suitable for use in fish feeds, the ARS researchers say. In addition, DDGS is cheaper and more palatable to fish than soybean-corn combinations. However, it lacks some essential amino acids, such as lysine.
In the ARS Aquatic Animal Health Research Unit at Auburn, Ala., nutrition scientist Chhorn Lim and his colleagues are evaluating how diets including DDGS influence growth performance and disease resistance in catfish and tilapia.
The scientists gave the fish feeds that included 0, 10, 20, 30 or 40 percent DDGS. All five feeds had similar levels of energy, protein and fat. Results showed that tilapia thrive on feed with up to 20 percent DDGS. Adding supplemental lysine to the feed increased that percentage to 40 percent.
The scientists found that catfish thrived on feed comprising up to 40 percent DDGS plus lysine. In addition, they observed that catfish raised on diets that included DDGS demonstrated greater resistance to at least one major disease: enteric septicemia of catfish. Catfish raised on DDGS-containing diets were more likely to resist infection.
Surviving catfish raised on a diet without DDGS had fewer antibodies than those raised on the DDGS feed--particularly fish on the 20 percent DDGS diet, whose antibodies were significantly higher than those of the control fish.
This work has potential economic benefits for both ethanol and aquaculture. Finding markets for DDGS is essential to economical ethanol production. And substituting soybean-corn combinations with a cheaper protein source could help reduce the cost of fish feed, thereby reducing overall production costs.
ARS is the chief scientific research agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.