Technical Article

Nursery Trial of Whiteleg Shrimp in Seawater and Low Salinity Water Using a Synbiotic System

In intensive whiteleg shrimp farming systems with minimal water exchange, the microbial community (heterotrophic and nitrifying bacteria) stimulated by the supply of organic carbon in the water supports the conversion of nitrogen compounds into less toxic compounds (nitrate) and also microbial biomass. Several organic carbon sources have been used (molasses, plant bran, dextrose, and sugar) to stimulate bacterial growth. However, in recent years, new strategies such as synbiotics have been incorporated into intensive aquaculture production and are considered to have potential for shrimp farming.

ProtocolShrimpJanuary 12, 2022👁 31 views
Click to listen to AI-narrated summary (1.2×)
AI Summary

Generate an English summary for Nursery Trial of Whiteleg Shrimp in Seawater and Low Salinity Water Using a Synbiotic System

AI-generated summary based on the full article content below.

Editorial Framing

Why this article matters

    Full Article

    Using rice bran and wheat bran as organic carbon sources significantly aids in controlling nitrogen compounds and enhancing production in Pacific white shrimp nursery systems

    BRITO-1_1500-960x640

    In intensive Pacific white shrimp farming systems with minimal water exchange, the microbial community (heterotrophic and nitrifying bacteria) stimulated by organic carbon sources in the water aids in the transformation of nitrogen compounds into less toxic compounds (nitrate) and also microbial biomass. Several organic carbon sources have been used (molasses, plant bran, dextrose, and sugar) to stimulate bacterial growth. However, in recent years, new strategies such as synbiotics have been incorporated into intensive aquaculture production, considered to have potential for shrimp farming.

    Synbiotic systems are the result of anaerobic or aerobic processes carried out by microorganisms (probiotics) on plant or animal substrates, bran, and other carbohydrates (prebiotics). Thus, probiotic microorganisms promote the breakdown of complex organic molecules into simpler ones and provide a balanced amount of micronutrients and macronutrients for animals in aquaculture systems. Furthermore, there is the production of organic acids such as lactic, acetic, and butyric acids. This provides a balance among microorganisms and contributes to a more balanced organic carbon level in the system.

    This study evaluates the effect of anaerobic and aerobic processes using rice bran and wheat bran as organic carbon sources (synbiotic) on the growth of Pacific white shrimp postlarvae in seawater and low-salinity nursery systems.

    Study Setup

    Three experiments were conducted with seawater and low-salinity water. For the seawater experiment, a tank with 35‰ salinity water was disinfected with 13 mg/L chlorine and dechlorinated by aeration for 72 hours. Subsequently, inorganic fertilization was applied with urea (4.5 g N/m³), triple superphosphate (0.3 g P/m³), and sodium silicate (0.23 g Si/m³). In the low-salinity water experiment, seawater was diluted to 2 g/L salinity, disinfected with 13 mg/L chlorine, and dechlorinated by aeration for 72 hours. Subsequently, organic fertilization was carried out as for the seawater experiment.

    PL 10-24 were stocked at a density of 2,000 - 3,000 individuals/m³ and fed commercial feed (45% crude protein and 9.5% lipid) 4 times/day. Feeding rates were adjusted weekly based on shrimp growth rate, estimated consumption, and mortality.

    To evaluate shrimp performance, at the end of each experiment, shrimp were weighed to determine final weight (g), feed conversion ratio (FCR), yield (kg/m³), and survival rate (%).

    Water quality parameters in the experimental units such as dissolved oxygen (DO, mg/L), temperature (°C), and salinity (g/L) were monitored daily. Other parameters such as total ammonia nitrogen (TAN, mg/L), nitrite nitrogen (NO2 – N, mg/L), and alkalinity (mg CaCO3/L) were measured weekly.

    Experiment 1

    Organic fertilization was performed approximately 10 times. The fertilizer was processed through an anaerobic phase for 48 hours and an aerobic phase for 24 hours. During the experiment, the fertilizer was added to the experimental units every 3 days throughout the 42-day experiment. The organic fertilizer consisted of wheat bran (22.5 – 50 g/m³), molasses (12 - 25 g/m³), and sodium bicarbonate (4.5 - 10 g/m³). We added 0.5 g/m³ of a product containing Bacillus subtilis, B. licheniformis, Lactobacillus sp., Saccharomyces sp., and Pseudomonas sp. at 7.7 x 108 CFU/g.

    Experiment 2

    Organic fertilization was performed approximately 10 times. The fertilizer was processed through an anaerobic phase for 24 hours and an aerobic phase for 24 hours. The organic fertilizer consisted of rice bran (<200 μm, 20 g/m³), molasses (2 g/m³), and sodium bicarbonate (4 g/m³). An additional 0.5 g/m³ of a product containing Bacillus subtilis, B. licheniformis, Lactobacillus sp., Saccharomyces sp., and Pseudomonas sp. at 5.5 - 6.5 x 107 CFU/g was added.

    Experiment 3

    Organic fertilization was performed 8 - 10 times. The fertilizer was processed through an anaerobic phase for 24 hours and an aerobic phase for 24 hours. The organic fertilizer consisted of rice bran (<200 μm, 20 g/m³), molasses (2 g/m³), and sodium bicarbonate (4 g/m³). An additional 0.5 g/m³ of a product containing Bacillus subtilis, B. licheniformis, Lactobacillus sp., Saccharomyces sp., and Pseudomonas sp. at 6.5 x 107 CFU/g was added. Additionally, in this experiment, to support the development of the microbial community and nitrification process in the experimental units, we added 2 shell pieces of Anomalocardia brasiliana as an artificial substrate (covering approximately 28% of the bottom area (25 x 24 x 5 cm), corresponding to 3.36% of the volume), reusing approximately 15% of the water in the shrimp nursery tank.

    BRITO-2_1500-960x452

    Results and Discussion

    Water quality parameters remained within recommended ranges.

    Table 1. Water quality parameters

    Parameter

    Experiment 1

    Experiment 2

    Experiment 3

    TAN (mg/L)

    0.3 ± 0.11

    0.6 ± 0.36

    0.33 ± 0.54

    NO2 – N (mg/L)

    1.1 ± 0.49

    1.56 ± 0.92

    0.41 ± 0.13

    Alkalinity (mg CaCO3/L)

    118.34 ± 16.5

    128.31 ± 3.08

    95.47 ± 41.04

     

    Table 2. Nursery pond performance

    Parameter

    Experiment 1

    Experiment 2

    Experiment 3

    Weight (g)

    Related Products

    Products linked to this topic

    Product reference for MAX 4000
    shrimpThần Vương Blue

    MAX 4000

    Vi sinh đặc hiệu khử NO2

    Product reference for CLEVER
    shrimpThần Vương Blue

    CLEVER

    Tinh chất men kháng khống chế bệnh chết sớm và phân trắng

    Product reference for LALSEA BIOREM
    allNguyên liệu

    LALSEA BIOREM

    Khử NH3, xử lý hữu cơ sinh học, hiệu quả ở độ mặn cao

    More Reading

    Related technical articles

    SỰ THAY ĐỔI CỦA HỆ VI SINH ĐƯỜNG RUỘT DO SỰ NÓNG LÊN TOÀN CẦU. ĐIỀU HÒA SỨC KHỎE VẬT CHỦ VÀ TÌNH TRẠNG BỆNH Ở ĐỘNG VẬT BIẾN NHIỆT
    Research InsightShrimpFebruary 28, 2026

    CHANGES IN GUT MICROBIOTA DUE TO GLOBAL WARMING. REGULATING HOST HEALTH AND DISEASE STATUS IN POIKILOTHERMIC ANIMALS

    Tóm tắt nội dung chính: Sự nóng lên toàn cầu làm thay đổi hệ vi sinh vật đường ruột của tôm thẻ chân trắng Thái Bình Dương bằng cách[...]

    Toàn cảnh thị trường tôm thế giới 2025 — Dữ liệu từ Shrimp Insights (Tháng 2/2026)
    Technical articleShrimpApril 9, 2026

    Global Shrimp Market 2025 Overview — Shrimp Insights Bulletin February 2026

    Tổng hợp thị trường tôm thế giới 2025: Ecuador dẫn đầu xuất khẩu (1.39M tấn, +15%), EU tăng nhập khẩu mạnh nhất (+21%), Mỹ biến động[...]

    CÁ HỒI TRONG ĐIỀU KIỆN STRESS: CỦNG CỐ TUYẾN PHÒNG THỦ ĐẦU TIÊN
    Solution TrackShrimpFebruary 27, 2026

    SALMON UNDER STRESS CONDITIONS: REINFORCING THE FIRST LINE OF DEFENSE

    As the aquaculture industry increasingly develops strategies for animal health protection, functional nutrition has become a key fac[...]

    Technical Advisor

    Aquaculture Q&A

    🦐

    Help us serve you better

    Share your name + phone so we remember your pond next time — no repeating yourself.

    • 🔒 Tech team only — never shared with third parties
    • 📨 No spam, no promotional SMS
    • 💾 History saved on your device — clear anytime