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ARS fish physiologist Rick Barrows and Montana
Microbial Products have developed a barley protein concentrate that could
replace fishmeal to make a less expensive feed for trout and other commercially
produced fish. Click the image for more information about it.
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Barley Protein Concentrate Could Replace Fishmeal in
Aquaculture Feeds
By Sharon
Durham
February 5, 2010 Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
scientists and Montana Microbial Products (MMP) of Butte, Mont., have developed
a barley protein concentrate that could be fed to trout and other commercially
produced fish.
Physiologist
Rick
Barrows at the ARS
Small
Grains and Potato Germplasm Research Unit in Aberdeen, Idaho, teamed with
MMP to apply for a patent on a new enzymatic method that concentrates barley
protein and produces raw material for another valuable commodityethanol.
This process provides a high-protein ingredient that may replace other, more
expensive protein sources like fishmeal and soy protein concentrate in
commercial fish feed.
Currently there is no commercial production of barley protein concentrate,
but MMP is producing small quantities for fish-feeding studies with trout,
salmon and other species. MMP projects that the concentrate will sell for $700
to $1,200 per ton. Since fishmeal costs about $1,200 per ton, the projected
costs of barley protein concentrate compare favorably.
Feeding trials conducted by the Aberdeen researchers and MMP show that
barley protein concentrate successfully replaced both fishmeal and soy protein
concentrates in fish feed, meeting the fishes protein requirements.
Barrows and other researchers in the ARS unit also are examining the genetics
of barley to modify the grain for improved protein yield and nutritional
composition.
According to Barrows, feed is part of a complex interplay of genetics,
nutrition and economics in fish production. Barley protein concentrate could
completely replace fishmeal in fish feed if other essential nutrients are
provided as supplements.
Using barley protein instead of fishmeal in commercial fish feed could help
reduce the demand for millions of tons of fish taken from the ocean each year
to produce fishmeal.
Read
more about this research in the February 2010 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). This
research supports the USDA priorities of promoting international food security
and developing new sources of bioenergy.