EVALUATION OF A SUSTAINED-RELEASE POLYMER-ENCAPSULATED FORM OF RECOMBINANT PORCINE SOMATOTROPIN UPON LONG-TERM GROWTH-PERFORMANCE OF COHO SALMON, ONCORHYNCHUS-KISUTCH
E. Mclean et al., EVALUATION OF A SUSTAINED-RELEASE POLYMER-ENCAPSULATED FORM OF RECOMBINANT PORCINE SOMATOTROPIN UPON LONG-TERM GROWTH-PERFORMANCE OF COHO SALMON, ONCORHYNCHUS-KISUTCH, Aquaculture, 122(4), 1994, pp. 359-368
The effect of sustained-release recombinant porcine somatotropin (RPST
) treatment upon growth performance of coho salmon was examined over a
95-week period. Animals were implanted with one of 4 types of RPST-co
ntaining capsules, or were placebo-treated as controls. The encapsulat
ed RPST exhibited different liberation kinetics, in that protein relea
se was inversely proportional to the thickness of the polymer coating.
Fish implanted with pellets with the highest release rates for RPST d
uring a 14-week period maintained a weight advantage over the control
group until week 77, while the advantage in terms of length was mainta
ined for 95 weeks. Specific growth rates (SGR) for weight were signifi
cantly greater in fish treated with the capsules which exhibited the h
ighest RPST release over the first 26 weeks of the study when compared
to controls. However, between weeks 26 and 52, weight SGR was similar
in all groups. At trial termination, significant differences in relat
ive intestinal length, visceral and gonadosomatic indices were noted b
etween the group implanted with capsules expressing most rapid RPST re
lease and the placebo-implanted fish. Significant decreases in body li
pid levels, relative to initial values, were observed in fish implante
d with capsules expressing the two highest release rates.