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Dive into the research topics where Penelope M. Lucas is active.

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Featured researches published by Penelope M. Lucas.


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2011

Use of Corn Gluten Feed and Cottonseed Meal to Replace Soybean Meal and Corn in Diets for Pond-Raised Channel Catfish

Menghe H. Li; Edwin H. Robinson; Brian G. Bosworth; Daniel F. Oberle; Penelope M. Lucas

Abstract The prices of soybean meal and corn—the two most commonly used, traditional feed ingredients in channel catfish diets—have increased dramatically in recent years. Using less-expensive alternative feed ingredients to partially replace soybean meal and corn would reduce feed cost. The present study evaluated the use of corn gluten feed and cottonseed meal, two promising alternative feedstuffs, as replacements for soybean meal and corn in diets for pond-raised channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus. Five isonitrogenous (28% crude protein) diets that used corn gluten feed and cottonseed meal (approximately 1:1 ratio) to replace 0, 25, 50, 75, or 100% of the soybean meal in the control diet were evaluated. The level of corn in the diet decreased as those of corn gluten feed and cottonseed meal increased. Stocker-size channel catfish (mean initial weight = 0.175 kg/fish) were stocked into twenty 0.05-ha earthen ponds at a rate of 14,830 fish/ha. Fish were fed once daily to apparent satiation over a growin...


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2012

Effects of Dietary Fiber Concentrations Supplied by Corn Bran on Feed Intake, Growth, and Feed Efficiency of Channel Catfish

Menghe H. Li; Daniel F. Oberle; Penelope M. Lucas

Abstract The present study examined the effects of dietary fiber and digestible energy on the feed intake, growth, and feed efficiency of juvenile channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus. Fish with an initial weight of 9.8 ± 0.1 g/fish (mean ± SD) were stocked in 110-L flow-through aquariums and fed for 9 weeks with practical diets that contained graded levels of fiber supplied by corn bran. As total dietary fiber (TDF) increased, feed consumption and weight gain increased and then decreased, showing a quadratic response. Maximum feed consumption occurred at a TDF level of 27.0% (5.7% crude fiber, 19.1% neutral detergent fiber [NDF]). Channel catfish appear to have some ability to adapt to increased dietary fiber by increasing feed intake to satisfy their energy requirements. Maximum weight gain was achieved at a TDF level of 23.4% (5.0% crude fiber, 15.7% NDF), indicating that the presence of dietary fiber at certain levels is beneficial to the fish. The maximum tolerance level for TDF by channel catfish was...


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2012

Effects of Feeding Rate and Frequency on Production Characteristics of Pond-Raised Hybrid Catfish

Menghe H. Li; Edwin H. Robinson; Daniel F. Oberle; Penelope M. Lucas

Abstract The present study examined the effects of various daily feeding rates and feeding every other day on the growth, net yield, feed conversion ratio, and size distribution of hybrid catfish (female channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus × male blue catfish I. furcatus) in production ponds. Hybrid catfish fingerlings (average size, 45 g) were stocked into 0.04-ha ponds at a density of 14,826 fish/ha. Initially, all fish were fed to apparent satiation until feed consumption reached predetermined levels. Thereafter, the daily feeding rates for fish in the restricted feeding group were no more than 112, 135, or 168 kg·ha−1·d−1. Fish in the every-other-day feeding group were fed to apparent satiation daily until they reached about 0.23 kg and every other day to satiation thereafter. The results from the present study show that feeding every other day significantly reduces the weight gain and net yield of hybrid catfish but improves the feed conversion ratio. Partial budget analysis indicates that feeding hy...


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2009

Evaluation of Various Feeding Regimens in a Multiple-Batch Cropping System of Channel Catfish Production

Menghe H. Li; Edwin H. Robinson; Brian G. Bosworth; Daniel F. Oberle; Penelope M. Lucas

Abstract A 4-year pond study was conducted to compare net production, feed conversion, processing yield, and body composition of channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus that were fed once daily, fed every other day (EOD) to satiation, or fed an amount not exceeding 110 kg·ha−1·d−1 in a multiple-batch cropping system. The greatest amount of feed administered was observed for the daily satiation group, followed by the 110-kg·ha−1·d−1 group and the EOD group (P ≤ 0.05). Net production of fish fed daily to satiation did not significantly differ from that of fish fed up to 110 kg·ha−1·d−1, but that of fish fed daily (satiation or ≤110 kg/ha) was significantly higher than that of fish fed EOD to satiation. Feed conversion ratio was significantly lower in fish fed up to 110 kg·ha−1·d−1 or EOD to satiation than that of fish fed daily to satiation. Carcass, fillet, and total meat yields did not differ among feeding regimens. Fish fed EOD to satiation had lower fillet fat and higher fillet moisture than fish fed daily ...


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2017

Evaluation of Various Combinations of Alternative Protein Feedstuffs to Replace Soybean Meal in Diets for Pond-Raised Channel Catfish

Menghe H. Li; Brian G. Bosworth; Penelope M. Lucas

AbstractA study was conducted in earthen ponds to evaluate the use of combinations of two or three alternative protein sources to replace soybean meal in diets for Channel Catfish Ictalurus punctatus. Six 28% protein diets containing various combinations of alternative protein feedstuffs—cottonseed meal, corn distillers dried grains with solubles, corn germ meal, peanut meal, and porcine meat and bone meal—were evaluated. Channel Catfish stockers (mean initial weight = 87 g/fish) were stocked into 30 earthen ponds (0.04 ha) at a density of 14,826 fish/ha with five ponds per dietary treatment. They were fed once a day to apparent satiation for a 183-d growing season. There were no significant differences in total diet fed, net yield, weight gain, survival, processing yield, and fillet proximate composition among dietary treatments. Results from the present study show that all soybean meal could be replaced by two or three moderate- and high-protein alternative feedstuffs without significantly affecting gro...


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2013

Evaluation of Hydrolyzed Poultry Feathers as a Dietary Ingredient for Pond-Raised Channel Catfish

Menghe H. Li; Edwin H. Robinson; Brian G. Bosworth; Daniel F. Oberle; Penelope M. Lucas

Abstract The present study examined the use of hydrolyzed poultry feathers (HPF) as a replacement for soybean meal in diets for pond raised Channel Catfish Ictalurus punctatus. Four isonitrogenous (28% crude protein) diets were evaluated that contained 0, 5, 10, or 15% HPF. Fingerling Channel Catfish (mean ± SD initial weight was 47.5 ± 2.2 g) were stocked into twenty 0.04-ha earthen ponds at a rate of 14,830 fish/ha. Fish were fed once daily to apparent satiation for 140 d. No significant differences were observed for weight gain, feed conversion ratio (FCR), and survival among fish fed various levels of HPF. There were also no significant differences in net yield of fish fed diets containing 0, 5, and 10% HPF, but net yield of fish fed a diet containing 15% HPF was significantly lower than that of fish fed the control diet. Fish on diets containing 5% HPF and above were fed significantly less feed than fish fed the control diet. Regression analysis showed that total amount of diet fed, net yield, and we...


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2016

Effects of Dietary Protein Concentrations and Sources on Production Characteristics of Pond-Raised Hybrid Catfish Fingerlings

Menghe H. Li; David J. Wise; Charles C. Mischke; Penelope M. Lucas

AbstractA 2 × 2 factorial experiment was conducted to examine the growth performance of pond-raised hybrid catfish (female Channel Catfish Ictalurus punctatus × male Blue Catfish I. furcatus) fingerlings fed diets containing two levels of protein (35% or 32%) with two animal protein sources (fish meal or porcine meat, bone, and blood meal [PMBB]). Small hybrid catfish fingerlings with a mean initial weight of 2.0 g/fish (SD = 0.6) were stocked into 20 earthen ponds (0.04 ha) at a density of approximately 172,970 fish/ha, based on a sample count of 1,000 fish. The fish were fed once daily to apparent satiation for 113 d. Total weight of feed fed, gross yield, feed conversion ratio (FCR), condition factor, and observed mortality were not significantly affected by either dietary protein concentration or animal protein source. Results demonstrate that dietary protein levels can be reduced from 35% to 32% without compromising fish growth and FCR for hybrid catfish fingerlings raised from 2 to 71 g in a growing...


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2017

Evaluation of Peanut Meal as an Alternative Dietary Protein Source for Channel Catfish

Menghe H. Li; Penelope M. Lucas

AbstractUse of peanut meal as an alternative protein source in diets for Channel Catfish Ictalurus punctatus was evaluated in a 9-week study under controlled laboratory conditions. Five practical diets (28% crude protein and 6% crude lipid) were formulated to contain 0, 10, 15, 20, and 25% peanut meal as a replacement for cottonseed meal and soybean meal in the control diet. The control diet was a plant-based diet containing principally soybean meal (25%), cottonseed meal (20%), corn (20%), and corn germ meal (20%). All diets met or exceeded all known nutrient requirements of Channel Catfish. Twenty Channel Catfish fingerlings (mean initial weight: 12.8 g/fish) were stocked into 25 water flow-through glass aquaria (110 L). The fish were fed once daily to apparent satiation. Among dietary treatments, there were no significant differences in feed consumption, weight gain, feed conversion ratio, and survival, and no differences in muscle protein, fat, or moisture levels. The results demonstrate up to 25% pea...


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2016

Effects of No Feeding, Maintenance Feeding, and Refeeding on Production and Processing Characteristics of Market-Size Hybrid Catfish

Menghe H. Li; David J. Wise; Brian G. Bosworth; Penelope M. Lucas; Kyle Kingery

AbstractA pond study was initiated to evaluate effects of no feeding, maintenance feeding, and refeeding on production and processing characteristics of market-size hybrid catfish (female Channel Catfish Ictalurus punctatus × male Blue Catfish I. furcatus). Fish with an average weight of 644 g were stocked into 20 earthen ponds (0.04 ha) at 14,826 fish/ha at the end of May. They were either not fed (N2), fed once weekly (W2) to satiation for 2 months to simulate a long-term harvest delay, or fed daily (D2) to satiation. After 2 months fish in half the ponds in each of the two feed-restricted treatments were harvested, and all fish in the remaining ponds were fed daily for an additional month. After 2 months N2 fish experienced a 14.3% weight loss compared with a weight gain of 6.7% for FW2 fish. After 2 months both N2 and W2 fish had reduced visceral fat and fillet yield compared with fish fed daily, but there were no significant differences in visceral fat percentage and fillet yield between N2 and W2 fi...


Aquaculture Nutrition | 2010

Effects of various corn distillers by-products on growth, feed efficiency, and body composition of channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus.

Menghe H. Li; Edwin H. Robinson; Daniel F. Oberle; Penelope M. Lucas

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Menghe H. Li

Mississippi State University

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Brian G. Bosworth

United States Department of Agriculture

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Daniel F. Oberle

Mississippi State University

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Edwin H. Robinson

Mississippi State University

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David J. Wise

Mississippi State University

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Charles C. Mischke

Mississippi State University

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Kyle Kingery

Mississippi State University

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Ambika Tiwari

Mississippi State University

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Brian C. Peterson

United States Department of Agriculture

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Craig S. Tucker

United States Department of Agriculture

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