M. Achmad, I. G. S. Widarma, Miftakhul Fadilah, Riski Ramadhan, Siti Arleneyanti Putri
{"title":"The Effect of Adding Egg Shells to Moist Feed on The Specific Growth and Survival Rate of Lobster Panulirus sp","authors":"M. Achmad, I. G. S. Widarma, Miftakhul Fadilah, Riski Ramadhan, Siti Arleneyanti Putri","doi":"10.35911/torani.v5i1.18738","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Sea lobster is a commodity that has high value in both national and international markets. Globally, the demand for sea lobster is increasing by about 15% per year. During growth, lobsters undergo a moulting process. Moulting/ecdysis is a very important process in the life cycle of arthropods (including decapods) because shell release is a must for growth and metamorphosis. In improving and assisting the molting process in lobsters, it is assisted by the provision of additional calcium from egg shells. Egg shells contain 94% calcium carbonate, 1% calcium phosphate, 1% magnesium carbonate and 4% organic compounds. In this study, an experiment was conducted on the addition of feed with a mixture of egg shells to support post-moulting optimization and supplement calcium requirements for lobster larvae. The percentage of egg shells as treatment, namely treatment A (0%), B (5%), C (10%), and D (15%) of the total feed to be made for sea lobster. Maintenance is carried out in a controlled tub, for four months. The highest specific growth obtained in this treatment was treatment A (0.06-0.21%) and the lowest was treatment D (-0.02%)-(-0.37%). Furthermore, the highest survival rate was obtained in treatment A (66.7%) and the lowest in treatment D (33.3%), the highest number of molting lobsters was in treatment A (77.8%) and the lowest was treatment D (33.3%). This shows that the addition of eggshell flour to moist lobster feed has not had a significant effect. For further development, it is necessary to research related to the use of additional ingredients in moist feed for lobster.","PeriodicalId":278380,"journal":{"name":"Torani Journal of Fisheries and Marine Science","volume":"99 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-12-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Torani Journal of Fisheries and Marine Science","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.35911/torani.v5i1.18738","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Sea lobster is a commodity that has high value in both national and international markets. Globally, the demand for sea lobster is increasing by about 15% per year. During growth, lobsters undergo a moulting process. Moulting/ecdysis is a very important process in the life cycle of arthropods (including decapods) because shell release is a must for growth and metamorphosis. In improving and assisting the molting process in lobsters, it is assisted by the provision of additional calcium from egg shells. Egg shells contain 94% calcium carbonate, 1% calcium phosphate, 1% magnesium carbonate and 4% organic compounds. In this study, an experiment was conducted on the addition of feed with a mixture of egg shells to support post-moulting optimization and supplement calcium requirements for lobster larvae. The percentage of egg shells as treatment, namely treatment A (0%), B (5%), C (10%), and D (15%) of the total feed to be made for sea lobster. Maintenance is carried out in a controlled tub, for four months. The highest specific growth obtained in this treatment was treatment A (0.06-0.21%) and the lowest was treatment D (-0.02%)-(-0.37%). Furthermore, the highest survival rate was obtained in treatment A (66.7%) and the lowest in treatment D (33.3%), the highest number of molting lobsters was in treatment A (77.8%) and the lowest was treatment D (33.3%). This shows that the addition of eggshell flour to moist lobster feed has not had a significant effect. For further development, it is necessary to research related to the use of additional ingredients in moist feed for lobster.