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This paper studied the effects of delaying first breeding Hucho taimen larvae for different days on the larvae growth, survival, and body size. Five treatments were installed, i. e. , feeding begins on the first eating day (control, S0) and on the 9th, 12th, 15th, and 18th days after the first eating day (S1 -S4) at 10.4-14.9 degree C, respectively. By the end of the experiment (36-day), the growth rate and initial feeding rate in S1 was higher than that in S0, and the overall mortality rate in S1 was lower, but the body size and mass in S1and S0 had no significant difference. Compared with S0, S2 had higher growth rate, initial feeding rate, total mortality, and self-mutilation mortality, the body mass was significantly lower, but the body size had less difference. S3 had higher first feeding rate, body size, total mortality, and self-mutilation mortality, but significantly lower body mass than S0, whereas the growth rate had less difference. In S4, the growth rate and body mass were lower, and the total mortality and self-mutilation mortality were higher than those in S0. It was suggested that under the same conditions, delaying first feeding for 9 days would induce H. taimen larvae presenting "completely compensatory growth", and this feeding way could be applied for the culture of H. taimen larvae in their initial feeding period.

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