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5th Edition of the
World Aquaculture, Fisheries and Seafood Conference

June 09-11, 2025 | Rome, Italy
WAC 2025

Animal protein sources as a substitute for fishmeal in aquaculture diets: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Rendani Luthada Raswiswi, Speaker at Fisheries Conference
University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa
Title : Animal protein sources as a substitute for fishmeal in aquaculture diets: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Abstract:

Fishmeal is the main source of dietary protein for most commercially farmed fish species. However, fishmeal prices have been raised even further because of competition with domestic animals, shortage in world fishmeal supply, and increased demand. Increased fishmeal prices have contributed to the quest for alternatives necessary to replace fishmeal as a global research priority. A literature search was conducted using these terms on Google Scholar and EBSCOhost, fishmeal replacement in fish feeds, fishmeal alternatives in fish feeds, animal protein sources in aquaculture, insects in fish feeds, terrestrial byproducts, and fishery by-products. To calculate the variation between experiments, a random effect model was used. Results indicated that different fish species, sizes, and inclusion levels were used in the various studies and showed that the use of insects, terrestrial by-products, and fishery by-products has some limitations. Despite these drawbacks, the use of animal protein sources as a replacement for fishmeal in fish diets has had a positive impact on the feed conversion ratio, variable growth rate, final weight, and survival rate of different types of fish species of different size groups. Findings also showed that some animal byproducts had not been assessed as a protein source in aquaculture or animal feeds, and future studies are recommended. 

Biography:

Dr. Rendani is a Principal Technician in School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu Natal and a part-time Aquaculture Trainer at Université Nationale d’Agriculture (UNA), Ketou, Benin. She received her PhD in Ecological Sciences in 2022 at the University Of KwaZulu Natal. She acquired experiences in aquaculture facilities management, artificial breeding of catfish, feeding management, live feeds production, water quality management, laboratory and equipment’s maintenance at the University of Zululand, Department of Zoology, where she obtained her Master of Science in Zoology while working as a Senior Technician for nine years. She has four publications with 89 citations so far.

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