Materials and methodsWe investigated the effect of low and high feed supply of smolt sludge on the nutrient flows of carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P) in H. diversicolor on an individual level. Hereby we assessed ingestion, defecation, excretion, respiration, and uptake for growth.
Results and discussionNutrient flows differed between the nutrients C, N, and P in the high feed supply group where C uptake for growth was significantly higher than N and P uptake, and N uptake was significantly higher than P uptake. In contrast, no significant differences were observed in the low feed supply group. In the high feed supply group, most of the ingested C, N, and P by H. diversicolor was allocated to uptake for growth (76% C, 83% N, 85% P) with smaller proportions allocated to defecation (7% C, 7% N, 11% P) and respiration/excretion (18% C, 9% N, 5% P). The results from the low feed supply group suggest insufficient nutrient supply as most ingested C was allocated to respiration (84%), while most N was expended on uptake for growth (45%), and ingested P was either taken up for growth (58%) or spent on defecation (34%). Overall, nutrient uptake reflected the smolt sludge composition rather than nutrient requirements for H. diversicolor, which may be a short-term effect and needs to be investigated further. The flow of nutrients was strongly affected by feed supply, as ingestion, defecation, excretion, and uptake for growth were significantly higher in the high feed supply group than in the low feed supply group.