The future of aquaculture feeds:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York
Nova Science Publishers, Inc.
[2014]
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Schriftenreihe: | Marine biology (New York (N.Y.))
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | FAW01 FAW02 |
Beschreibung: | Includes index Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed November 20, 2014) |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource color illustrations |
ISBN: | 9781634631051 1634631056 9781634630696 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The future of aquaculture feeds |c Ella Linton, editor |
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264 | 4 | |c © 2014 | |
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490 | 0 | |a Marine biology (New York (N.Y.)) | |
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500 | |a Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed November 20, 2014) | ||
505 | 8 | |a THE FUTURE OF AQUACULTURE FEEDS; THE FUTURE OF AQUACULTURE FEEDS; Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data; CONTENTS; PREFACE; Chapter 1: THE FUTURE OF AQUAFEEDS; FOREWORD; EXECUTIVE SUMMARY; SUMMARY OF FINDINGS; CASE STUDY ONE: DEVELOPING THE POTENTIAL OF FISH PROCESSING BY PRODUCTS TAKES GUTS; CASE STUDY TWO: FROM FISH MEAL-DEPENDENT TO FISH MEAL-FREE: FEEDS RESEARCH IS PRODUCING THE ALTERNATIVE DIETS OF THE FUTURE FOR TROUT; CASE STUDY THREE: PLANT-BASED FEEDS FOR BLACK SEABASS SHOW PROMISE; CASE STUDY FOUR: SHRIMP FARMERS JOIN WITH RESEARCHERS TO TEST BEST NEW DIETS | |
505 | 8 | |a CASE STUDY FIVE: SEAWEED FARMING MAY BE KEY FOR ALTERNATIVE AQUACULTURE FEEDSCASE STUDY SIX: RESEARCH ON DIETS FOR THREATENED AND ENDANGERED FISH SPECIES HELD IN CAPTIVITY GAINS GROUND; CASE STUDY SEVEN: SOY PRODUCTS AND AQUACULTURE ARE A WINNING COMBINATION; APPROACH &PROCESSES; SUMMARY OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS PANEL; GLOSSARY; SUMMARY OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS PANEL; SUMMARY OF STAKEHOLDER EXPERTS PANEL; FUTURECASTS FROM EXPERTS PANELS; Chapter 2: FEEDS FOR AQUACULTURE: FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS; 1.WHAT TYPE OF FOOD DO FARMED FISH EAT?; 2. DO ALL FARMED FISH EAT THE SAME THING? | |
505 | 8 | |a 3.why use fishmeal and fish oil in the diets of farmed fish?4.where does fishmeal and fish oil come from?; 5.what are forage fish used for?; 6.what are fishmeal and fish oil used for?; 7. does aquaculture consume more wild fish than is produced?; 8. doesn't harvesting pelagic fish have a detrimental impact on the food chain and other animals that depend on them?; 9.what is being done to develop alternative feed ingredients?; 10.what are potential alternatives to feeding fish to fish?; 11. can some of the waste that results from processing fish be used as fish food? | |
505 | 8 | |a 12.what about arguments that farmed fish are contaminated with mercury and other heavy metals?13. are there growth hormones in u.s. farmed fish?; 14. are antibiotics fed to fish to improve growth (or for any reason other than disease)?; 15. are antibiotics used at all in u.s. aquaculture?; 16. are farmed salmon fed or injected with dyes?; 17. how many pounds of other fish are required to produce one pound of salmon?; 18.why don't we just eat fish from these pelagic fisheries (i.e. further down the food chain)? | |
505 | 8 | |a 19. doesn't uneaten fish food accumulate on the ocean floor and pose an environmental risk?20. does noaa fund research on alternative feeds?; 21.what are some of the constraints to reducing aquaculture's dependence on wild fisheries?; 22.what are specific areas of researchthat will lead to decreased dependenceon fishmeal and fish oil?; index | |
505 | 8 | |a Fish meal and fish oil are important components in the feeds for many farm-raised species, from pigs and poultry to farmed fish. As ingredients in aquaculture feed, fish meal and fish oil supply essential amino acids and fatty acids required for normal growth for cultured species, including carp, salmon, tilapia, trout, catfish, shrimp and others. Fish meal and oil also help maintain the important human health benefits of seafood. However, the relatively high cost of fish meal and fish oil - and growing pressure on the wild fisheries that supply the fish meal and fish oil - are adding up to ma | |
650 | 7 | |a TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Agriculture / General |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a Aquaculture |2 fast | |
650 | 4 | |a Aquaculture / Bibliography | |
650 | 4 | |a Aquaculture | |
650 | 4 | |a Fish hatcheries / Bibliography | |
650 | 4 | |a Fish-culture / Bibliography | |
650 | 4 | |a Landwirtschaft | |
650 | 4 | |a Aquaculture | |
655 | 7 | |0 (DE-588)4006432-3 |a Bibliografie |2 gnd-content | |
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Erscheint auch als |n Druck-Ausgabe |a Linton, Ella |t The Future of Aquaculture Feeds |
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contents | THE FUTURE OF AQUACULTURE FEEDS; THE FUTURE OF AQUACULTURE FEEDS; Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data; CONTENTS; PREFACE; Chapter 1: THE FUTURE OF AQUAFEEDS; FOREWORD; EXECUTIVE SUMMARY; SUMMARY OF FINDINGS; CASE STUDY ONE: DEVELOPING THE POTENTIAL OF FISH PROCESSING BY PRODUCTS TAKES GUTS; CASE STUDY TWO: FROM FISH MEAL-DEPENDENT TO FISH MEAL-FREE: FEEDS RESEARCH IS PRODUCING THE ALTERNATIVE DIETS OF THE FUTURE FOR TROUT; CASE STUDY THREE: PLANT-BASED FEEDS FOR BLACK SEABASS SHOW PROMISE; CASE STUDY FOUR: SHRIMP FARMERS JOIN WITH RESEARCHERS TO TEST BEST NEW DIETS CASE STUDY FIVE: SEAWEED FARMING MAY BE KEY FOR ALTERNATIVE AQUACULTURE FEEDSCASE STUDY SIX: RESEARCH ON DIETS FOR THREATENED AND ENDANGERED FISH SPECIES HELD IN CAPTIVITY GAINS GROUND; CASE STUDY SEVEN: SOY PRODUCTS AND AQUACULTURE ARE A WINNING COMBINATION; APPROACH &PROCESSES; SUMMARY OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS PANEL; GLOSSARY; SUMMARY OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS PANEL; SUMMARY OF STAKEHOLDER EXPERTS PANEL; FUTURECASTS FROM EXPERTS PANELS; Chapter 2: FEEDS FOR AQUACULTURE: FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS; 1.WHAT TYPE OF FOOD DO FARMED FISH EAT?; 2. DO ALL FARMED FISH EAT THE SAME THING? 3.why use fishmeal and fish oil in the diets of farmed fish?4.where does fishmeal and fish oil come from?; 5.what are forage fish used for?; 6.what are fishmeal and fish oil used for?; 7. does aquaculture consume more wild fish than is produced?; 8. doesn't harvesting pelagic fish have a detrimental impact on the food chain and other animals that depend on them?; 9.what is being done to develop alternative feed ingredients?; 10.what are potential alternatives to feeding fish to fish?; 11. can some of the waste that results from processing fish be used as fish food? 12.what about arguments that farmed fish are contaminated with mercury and other heavy metals?13. are there growth hormones in u.s. farmed fish?; 14. are antibiotics fed to fish to improve growth (or for any reason other than disease)?; 15. are antibiotics used at all in u.s. aquaculture?; 16. are farmed salmon fed or injected with dyes?; 17. how many pounds of other fish are required to produce one pound of salmon?; 18.why don't we just eat fish from these pelagic fisheries (i.e. further down the food chain)? 19. doesn't uneaten fish food accumulate on the ocean floor and pose an environmental risk?20. does noaa fund research on alternative feeds?; 21.what are some of the constraints to reducing aquaculture's dependence on wild fisheries?; 22.what are specific areas of researchthat will lead to decreased dependenceon fishmeal and fish oil?; index Fish meal and fish oil are important components in the feeds for many farm-raised species, from pigs and poultry to farmed fish. As ingredients in aquaculture feed, fish meal and fish oil supply essential amino acids and fatty acids required for normal growth for cultured species, including carp, salmon, tilapia, trout, catfish, shrimp and others. Fish meal and oil also help maintain the important human health benefits of seafood. However, the relatively high cost of fish meal and fish oil - and growing pressure on the wild fisheries that supply the fish meal and fish oil - are adding up to ma |
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dewey-full | 639.8 |
dewey-hundreds | 600 - Technology (Applied sciences) |
dewey-ones | 639 - Hunting, fishing & conservation |
dewey-raw | 639.8 |
dewey-search | 639.8 |
dewey-sort | 3639.8 |
dewey-tens | 630 - Agriculture and related technologies |
discipline | Agrar-/Forst-/Ernährungs-/Haushaltswissenschaft / Gartenbau |
format | Electronic eBook |
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series2 | Marine biology (New York (N.Y.)) |
spelling | The future of aquaculture feeds Ella Linton, editor New York Nova Science Publishers, Inc. [2014] © 2014 1 online resource color illustrations txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Marine biology (New York (N.Y.)) Includes index Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed November 20, 2014) THE FUTURE OF AQUACULTURE FEEDS; THE FUTURE OF AQUACULTURE FEEDS; Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data; CONTENTS; PREFACE; Chapter 1: THE FUTURE OF AQUAFEEDS; FOREWORD; EXECUTIVE SUMMARY; SUMMARY OF FINDINGS; CASE STUDY ONE: DEVELOPING THE POTENTIAL OF FISH PROCESSING BY PRODUCTS TAKES GUTS; CASE STUDY TWO: FROM FISH MEAL-DEPENDENT TO FISH MEAL-FREE: FEEDS RESEARCH IS PRODUCING THE ALTERNATIVE DIETS OF THE FUTURE FOR TROUT; CASE STUDY THREE: PLANT-BASED FEEDS FOR BLACK SEABASS SHOW PROMISE; CASE STUDY FOUR: SHRIMP FARMERS JOIN WITH RESEARCHERS TO TEST BEST NEW DIETS CASE STUDY FIVE: SEAWEED FARMING MAY BE KEY FOR ALTERNATIVE AQUACULTURE FEEDSCASE STUDY SIX: RESEARCH ON DIETS FOR THREATENED AND ENDANGERED FISH SPECIES HELD IN CAPTIVITY GAINS GROUND; CASE STUDY SEVEN: SOY PRODUCTS AND AQUACULTURE ARE A WINNING COMBINATION; APPROACH &PROCESSES; SUMMARY OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS PANEL; GLOSSARY; SUMMARY OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS PANEL; SUMMARY OF STAKEHOLDER EXPERTS PANEL; FUTURECASTS FROM EXPERTS PANELS; Chapter 2: FEEDS FOR AQUACULTURE: FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS; 1.WHAT TYPE OF FOOD DO FARMED FISH EAT?; 2. DO ALL FARMED FISH EAT THE SAME THING? 3.why use fishmeal and fish oil in the diets of farmed fish?4.where does fishmeal and fish oil come from?; 5.what are forage fish used for?; 6.what are fishmeal and fish oil used for?; 7. does aquaculture consume more wild fish than is produced?; 8. doesn't harvesting pelagic fish have a detrimental impact on the food chain and other animals that depend on them?; 9.what is being done to develop alternative feed ingredients?; 10.what are potential alternatives to feeding fish to fish?; 11. can some of the waste that results from processing fish be used as fish food? 12.what about arguments that farmed fish are contaminated with mercury and other heavy metals?13. are there growth hormones in u.s. farmed fish?; 14. are antibiotics fed to fish to improve growth (or for any reason other than disease)?; 15. are antibiotics used at all in u.s. aquaculture?; 16. are farmed salmon fed or injected with dyes?; 17. how many pounds of other fish are required to produce one pound of salmon?; 18.why don't we just eat fish from these pelagic fisheries (i.e. further down the food chain)? 19. doesn't uneaten fish food accumulate on the ocean floor and pose an environmental risk?20. does noaa fund research on alternative feeds?; 21.what are some of the constraints to reducing aquaculture's dependence on wild fisheries?; 22.what are specific areas of researchthat will lead to decreased dependenceon fishmeal and fish oil?; index Fish meal and fish oil are important components in the feeds for many farm-raised species, from pigs and poultry to farmed fish. As ingredients in aquaculture feed, fish meal and fish oil supply essential amino acids and fatty acids required for normal growth for cultured species, including carp, salmon, tilapia, trout, catfish, shrimp and others. Fish meal and oil also help maintain the important human health benefits of seafood. However, the relatively high cost of fish meal and fish oil - and growing pressure on the wild fisheries that supply the fish meal and fish oil - are adding up to ma TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Agriculture / General bisacsh Aquaculture fast Aquaculture / Bibliography Aquaculture Fish hatcheries / Bibliography Fish-culture / Bibliography Landwirtschaft (DE-588)4006432-3 Bibliografie gnd-content Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Linton, Ella The Future of Aquaculture Feeds |
spellingShingle | The future of aquaculture feeds THE FUTURE OF AQUACULTURE FEEDS; THE FUTURE OF AQUACULTURE FEEDS; Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data; CONTENTS; PREFACE; Chapter 1: THE FUTURE OF AQUAFEEDS; FOREWORD; EXECUTIVE SUMMARY; SUMMARY OF FINDINGS; CASE STUDY ONE: DEVELOPING THE POTENTIAL OF FISH PROCESSING BY PRODUCTS TAKES GUTS; CASE STUDY TWO: FROM FISH MEAL-DEPENDENT TO FISH MEAL-FREE: FEEDS RESEARCH IS PRODUCING THE ALTERNATIVE DIETS OF THE FUTURE FOR TROUT; CASE STUDY THREE: PLANT-BASED FEEDS FOR BLACK SEABASS SHOW PROMISE; CASE STUDY FOUR: SHRIMP FARMERS JOIN WITH RESEARCHERS TO TEST BEST NEW DIETS CASE STUDY FIVE: SEAWEED FARMING MAY BE KEY FOR ALTERNATIVE AQUACULTURE FEEDSCASE STUDY SIX: RESEARCH ON DIETS FOR THREATENED AND ENDANGERED FISH SPECIES HELD IN CAPTIVITY GAINS GROUND; CASE STUDY SEVEN: SOY PRODUCTS AND AQUACULTURE ARE A WINNING COMBINATION; APPROACH &PROCESSES; SUMMARY OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS PANEL; GLOSSARY; SUMMARY OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS PANEL; SUMMARY OF STAKEHOLDER EXPERTS PANEL; FUTURECASTS FROM EXPERTS PANELS; Chapter 2: FEEDS FOR AQUACULTURE: FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS; 1.WHAT TYPE OF FOOD DO FARMED FISH EAT?; 2. DO ALL FARMED FISH EAT THE SAME THING? 3.why use fishmeal and fish oil in the diets of farmed fish?4.where does fishmeal and fish oil come from?; 5.what are forage fish used for?; 6.what are fishmeal and fish oil used for?; 7. does aquaculture consume more wild fish than is produced?; 8. doesn't harvesting pelagic fish have a detrimental impact on the food chain and other animals that depend on them?; 9.what is being done to develop alternative feed ingredients?; 10.what are potential alternatives to feeding fish to fish?; 11. can some of the waste that results from processing fish be used as fish food? 12.what about arguments that farmed fish are contaminated with mercury and other heavy metals?13. are there growth hormones in u.s. farmed fish?; 14. are antibiotics fed to fish to improve growth (or for any reason other than disease)?; 15. are antibiotics used at all in u.s. aquaculture?; 16. are farmed salmon fed or injected with dyes?; 17. how many pounds of other fish are required to produce one pound of salmon?; 18.why don't we just eat fish from these pelagic fisheries (i.e. further down the food chain)? 19. doesn't uneaten fish food accumulate on the ocean floor and pose an environmental risk?20. does noaa fund research on alternative feeds?; 21.what are some of the constraints to reducing aquaculture's dependence on wild fisheries?; 22.what are specific areas of researchthat will lead to decreased dependenceon fishmeal and fish oil?; index Fish meal and fish oil are important components in the feeds for many farm-raised species, from pigs and poultry to farmed fish. As ingredients in aquaculture feed, fish meal and fish oil supply essential amino acids and fatty acids required for normal growth for cultured species, including carp, salmon, tilapia, trout, catfish, shrimp and others. Fish meal and oil also help maintain the important human health benefits of seafood. However, the relatively high cost of fish meal and fish oil - and growing pressure on the wild fisheries that supply the fish meal and fish oil - are adding up to ma TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Agriculture / General bisacsh Aquaculture fast Aquaculture / Bibliography Aquaculture Fish hatcheries / Bibliography Fish-culture / Bibliography Landwirtschaft |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4006432-3 |
title | The future of aquaculture feeds |
title_auth | The future of aquaculture feeds |
title_exact_search | The future of aquaculture feeds |
title_full | The future of aquaculture feeds Ella Linton, editor |
title_fullStr | The future of aquaculture feeds Ella Linton, editor |
title_full_unstemmed | The future of aquaculture feeds Ella Linton, editor |
title_short | The future of aquaculture feeds |
title_sort | the future of aquaculture feeds |
topic | TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Agriculture / General bisacsh Aquaculture fast Aquaculture / Bibliography Aquaculture Fish hatcheries / Bibliography Fish-culture / Bibliography Landwirtschaft |
topic_facet | TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Agriculture / General Aquaculture Aquaculture / Bibliography Fish hatcheries / Bibliography Fish-culture / Bibliography Landwirtschaft Bibliografie |