Term
Compare the inputs vs outputs in fish production |
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Definition
see question #1 on study sheet |
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Term
What is nutrition vs feeding? |
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Definition
Nutrition: science of nutrients
Feeding: process of delivering nutrients |
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Term
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Definition
Feed: imposed Food: self-selected |
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Term
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Definition
Feed: individual item being imposed on the animal
Diet: total different food items being consumed |
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Term
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Definition
Feed Efficiency (Ratio)
Biomass gain / feed consumed (DM basis) |
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Definition
Feed Conversion Ratio
Feed consumed (DM) / biomass gain |
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Term
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Definition
economical feed conversion ratio
Feed Purchased / Biomass Sold |
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Term
What is the difference between eFCR or bFCR? |
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Definition
bFCR = biological feed conversion ratio
accounts for wasted feed, fish that die etc. (eFCR does not) |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Definition
starch, hemicellulose, lignin, etc |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
What are the abbreviations for the following?
Intake Fecal Digestible Urinary Branchial Metabolizable Retained |
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Definition
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Term
N is the abbreviation for.... |
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Definition
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Term
IN = FN + UN + ZN + RN
What does this equation mean? |
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Definition
Nitrogen intake = Fecal nitrogen + urinary nitrogen + branchial nitrogen + retained nitrogen |
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Term
Compare the feed intake of large vs small animals |
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Definition
large animals eat more in terms of absolute intake, but less in terms of %body weight per day |
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Term
Is maximum FCE achieved if feed intake levels are equal to, above or below the max feed intake of the animal |
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Definition
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Term
What effect does a decrease in feeding level have on FCE? |
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Definition
minimal, but there is a small decrease |
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Term
What factors affect how much feed a fish needs per day? (4) |
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Definition
water temp / other environmental variables
genetic potential
nutritional composition of the feed
husbandry practices and health status |
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Term
How does increasing the concentration of an essential nutrient affect growth? |
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Definition
increases feed intake an metabolic efficiency, improving growth rate |
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Term
What factors affect the estimation of a nutrient requirement? |
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Definition
-experimental conditions/errors -parameter being studied (weight gain vs protein gain) -mathematical model being used -feed composition -how requirement is expressed (% of diet, g/100g protein etc) |
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Term
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Definition
probability you will reject null when it's true |
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Term
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Definition
probability you will accept null when it's false |
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Term
What is statistical power? |
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Definition
the probability the test will reject the null hypothesis when it is false. |
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Term
Is a higher power of a test good or bad? |
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Definition
good!
more likely to correctly reject a false null hypothesis |
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Term
What is the correlation between the size of the difference between two diets being compared, and the number of experimental replications you need to have? |
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Definition
The smaller the difference between two diets, the more replications you need to have to be able to show a significance |
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Term
If you only have 2 ponds to carry out a diet comparison, how can you make the most of your experiment? |
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Definition
Plan, monitor and document the feed preparation process very carefully
Use same batch of each ingredients for all the feeds
Use strong treatment structure Ex: 5 or 6 diets with grade levels of nutrients of interest If one diet is “off” target, the general trend will still be seen
Test for feeds for nutrients or compound studied or indicator Helps determine if the preparation was according to recipe Ex: Stachyose levels for soybean meal |
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