Aquatic macrophytes serve as a habitat for aquatic invertebrates
as well as cover for fish. They also generate oxygen and provide food for some
fish and other animals. They thrive in nutrient-rich water. In the natural environment, herbivorous and
omnivorous fish might find edible plants for consumption. Aquatic plants can
provide nutritious food for fish in aquariums or backyard ponds. Ipomoea
aquatica, an aquatic weed, might be managed in an environmentally benign way by
including it in a fish diet. Fish feed is critical to the long-term viability
of aquaculture production. However, fish nutrition is crucial since feed is the
costliest component of the aquaculture system, accounting for around 60% of
total production costs. The young grass carp prefer duckweeds such as Lemna,
Spirodela, Wolffia, and Azolla until they reach a greater size and can consume
macrophytes. Aquatic weeds are potential fish and animal feed components that
are extensively spread across Indian water bodies. The higher nutritional content
of aquatic weeds has lately enabled fish meal to be largely or entirely
substituted. Aquatic weed meal has 11 to 32% crude protein, 2.9 to 16.81% crude
fat, 8 to 31% crude ash, and a very high amino acid, mineral, and vitamin
content, depending on the components employed. Phytoremediation is a
sustainable, cost-effective technology that uses plants to convert and
stabilize pollutants in soil and water bodies. Aquatic plant species, primarily
a broad group of macrophytes, have long served as indicators of water body
health. A review of the ways in which aquatic macrophytes can be used in the
food production process, including as human food, livestock fodder, fertilizer
(mulch and manure, ash, green manure, compost, biogas slurry), and food for
aquatic herbivores like adults and larval forms of fish, crab, and prawns.
Author(s) Details
Karri Rama Rao
Department of Zoology, Dr. V. S. Krishna Govt. Degree College (A),
Visakhapatnam, India.
R.
Ramachandra Rao
Department of Zoology, Government Degree College, Rajam,
Vizianagaram, Andhra Pradesh, India.
Karri
Naga Mani
Department of Zoology, Narayana Junior College, Boyyapalem,
Visakhapatnam, India.
Please
see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/ibs/v9/1569
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