Pioneering the transformation in aquaculture feeds
The BioMar feed factory in Denmark in the finals for the German Sustainability Award 2025. An independent expert panel has acknowledged BioMar A/S,…
Frequent Feeding
Small meals keep fry growing evenly and reduce stress.
Stable Feed
Water-stable pellets prevent nutrient loss and support small fry.
High Digestibility
Easily digested feed supports growth and protects water quality.
Optimal Oxygen
Stable oxygen levels ensure consistent feeding and healthy fry.
Balanced Nutrition
Correct nutrients prevent early deformities during fry development.
Gradual Weaning
Increase pellet size slowly to avoid underfeeding and blockages.
Close Observation
Monitoring fry helps ensure even feeding and healthy growth.
The earliest stages of life are decisive for a fry’s long term performance. During these first weeks, fry are physiologically fragile, nutritionally demanding and highly sensitive to their environment. To support strong survival, healthy development and uniform growth, farmers must focus on feeding strategy, water quality, nutrient stability and careful observation. Below are seven feeding strategy tips that form the foundation of a successful fry rearing programme.
Fry have tiny stomachs and digest food in just 20–30 minutes. Frequent, small meals prevent dominant individuals from taking over and support uniform growth, reduced stress, and better survival.
Fry are slow swimmers and need time to find the feed. If pellets break down too quickly, nutrients leach into the water before the smallest fish can eat. Water stable micro diets help maintain pellet integrity and reduce water pollution.
Their digestive system is still developing, so anything fry cannot digest becomes waste. Highly digestible starter diets support growth and maintain water quality.
Fry have sensitive gills and high metabolic rates. Even small drops in dissolved oxygen can stop feeding immediately, while nitrogen supersaturation can cause harm. Stable gas levels ensure healthy feeding activity.
In the first weeks, the skeleton, organs, and muscles develop. Nutrient deficiencies in phospholipids, vitamins or minerals can lead to skeletal deformities. Use well formulated starter feeds and maintain good water quality to minimize risks.
As fry grow, their mouth size increases, enabling them to eat larger pellets. Increasing pellet size too quickly can cause underfeeding or blockages. Gradually adjust pellet size and mix sizes during weaning to support even growth.
Monitor appearance, environment, and feeding behaviour carefully. Hand-feeding helps evaluate appetite and ensures all fry are feeding evenly.
Fry represent the future of every production cycle, and the care they receive in the first weeks has a measurable impact on growth, health and uniformity throughout their lifetime. By focusing on feeding frequency, nutrient stability, digestibility, gas balance, early nutrition, gradual weaning and close observation, farmers can secure stronger fry batches and better long term results.
The BioMar feed factory in Denmark in the finals for the German Sustainability Award 2025. An independent expert panel has acknowledged BioMar A/S,…
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