Nitrogen and energy loss in the marine teleost Lithognathus mormyrus (Linnaeus)

1990 
Abstract Nitrogen excretion and assimilation efficiencies in Lithognathus mormyrus (Linnaeus), a marine teleost present in high-energy surf zones in Algoa Bay, South Africa, were determined under controlled laboratory conditions at 15, 20 and 25 °C. Ammonia was the major form of nonfaecal nitrogen excreted by starved and fed L. mormyrus . Urea and amino acids were secondary excretory products. Ammonia excretion rates were temperature independent and the excretion rates of fed fish were significantly higher than starved fish at 20 and 25 °C but not at 15 °C. The mass component ( b ) of the mass/ammonia excretion equation was temperature independent and ranged from 0.590 to 0.669 and from 0.670 to 0.767 for starved and fed fish, respectively. The mean percentage of food energy lost via the dissolved nonfaecal excretory products (exogenous plus endogenous) was 4.12%. Assimilation efficiencies ranged from 71.89 to 98.78% for dry matter and from 96.89 to 99.88% on an energy basis. The combined nonfaecal and faecal energy loss was calculated at 10.11% of the ingested energy. The omnivorous ichthyofauna present in the surf zone ecosystem recycle 33 g N · m strip · yr −1 . This constitutes
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