Ip. Smith et al., THE EFFECTS OF FOOD PELLET DIMENSIONS ON FEEDING RESPONSES BY ATLANTIC SALMON (SALMO-SALAR L) IN A MARINE NET PEN, Aquaculture, 130(2-3), 1995, pp. 167-175
The effects of the diameter and length of cylindroid food pellets on t
he feeding responses of one-sea-winter Atlantic salmon in a marine net
pen have been investigated. Pellets of different shapes and sizes wer
e dropped into the pen in a random sequence and the responses of salmo
n were recorded with a video system. Both the diameter and length of p
ellets affected the time until first capture, with salmon taking longe
r to capture small pellets. The probability of a pellet being rejected
after having been grasped was related to its length, but not its diam
eter: shorter pellets were rejected least often. Thus, the larger pell
ets that appeared to be initially most attractive to salmon were not t
he sizes that they ingested most readily once grasped. Acceptability (
as indicated by rejection rate) varied over the range of pellet length
s that occurs within the size class of commercial feed recommended for
these fish, and the optimum length (in terms of the number of pellets
eaten rapidly) was shorter than the mean length of commercial pellets
. The possible interaction of the effects of pellet size and hardness
on palatability should be investigated.