4.7 Article

Preferential feeding on high quality diets decreases methyl mercury of farm-raised common carp (Cyprinus carpio L.)

Journal

AQUACULTURE
Volume 338, Issue -, Pages 105-110

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2012.01.006

Keywords

Methyl mercury; Stable isotopes; Trophic transfer; Common carp

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [L516-817]

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This study on aquaculture ponds investigated how diet sources affect methyl mercury (MeHg) bioaccumulation of the worldwide key diet fish, common carp (Cyprinus carpio). We tested how MeHg concentrations of one and two year-old pond-raised carp changed with different food quality: a) zooplankton (natural pond diet), b) cereals enriched with vegetable oil (VO ponds), and c) compound feeds enriched with marine fish oils (FO ponds). It was hypothesized that carp preferentially feed on supplementary diets with the highest biochemical quality (FO diet over VO diets over zooplankton). Although MeHg concentrations were highest in zooplankton of FO ponds, MeHg concentrations of carp were clearly lower in FO ponds (17-32 ng g(-1) dry weight) compared to the reference (40-46 ng g(-1) dry weight) and VO ponds (55-86 ng g(-1) dry weight). Stable isotope mixing models (delta C-13, delta N-15) indicated selective feeding of carp on high quality FO diets that caused MeHg concentrations of carp to decrease with increasing dietary proportions of supplementary FO feeds. Results demonstrate that carp selectively feed on diets of highest biochemical quality and strongly suggest that high diet quality can reduce MeHg bioaccumulation in farm-raised carp. (c) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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