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Aquaculture: Vitamin C

Fortification Considerations

Vitamin supplementation guidelines (Table 1) are designed to provide Optimum Vitamin Nutrition under typical industry practices. Optimum Vitamin Nutrition is the provision of all known vitamins in the diet at levels that permit optimum health and productivity of aquatic animals. The vitamin levels required to attain optimum vitamin nutrition generally exceed the nutrient requirements published by the United States National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council (NRC).

Table 1

The NRC requirements for aquatic animals are dietary vitamin levels needed to prevent overt clinical deficiency signs. Optimal allowances compensate for stress factors on the animal and on the feed, thus ensuring that vitamin fortification does not limit performance and health. These guidelines are based on extensive university and industry research; published requirements; field experience; and characteristics such as stability and uniformity of the commercial product forms used to supplement vitamins in premixes, base mixes and complete feeds.

These guidelines are ranges to try to accommodate the numerous factors that influence the vitamin requirements of animals, including the wide variations in commercial feed manufacturing practices and the stresses involved in modern production.

Yet, the listed vitamin levels are only guidelines and should be adapted to local conditions. These guidelines may not meet the requirements of animal in all cases, for example during restricted feeding. In all cases, national feed legislation must be followed.

 

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