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M

M. Sundaram

Researcher at Central Institute of Brackishwater Aquaculture

Publications -  11
Citations -  258

M. Sundaram is an academic researcher from Central Institute of Brackishwater Aquaculture. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Shrimp. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications receiving 163 citations.

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Carbon: Nitrogen (C:N) ratio level variation influences microbial community of the system and growth as well as immunity of shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei) in biofloc based culture system

TL;DR: Optimization of C:N ratio under biofloc based culture system to improve the growth performances and water quality parameters is demonstrated and demonstrated that with optimum C:n ratio, BFT can be used to optimize the bacterial community composition for both optimal water quality and optimal shrimp health.
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Evaluation of biofloc generation protocols to adopt high density nursery rearing of Penaeus vannamei for better growth performances, protective responses and immuno modulation in biofloc based technology

TL;DR: Evaluating the effects of biofloc treatments generated and maintained through three approaches on growth performances, physico-chemical parameters, microbial dynamics, feed utilization and immunological assessments in P. vannamei nursery rearing found BFT treatments showed significantly higher growth as observed in average body weight.
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Facial emotion recognition using subband selective multilevel stationary wavelet gradient transform and fuzzy support vector machine

TL;DR: The statistical parameters from the proposed subband selective multilevel stationary wavelet gradient transform are calculated and are utilized as features for efficacious recognition of emotion.
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Cellular and molecular immune response and production performance of Indian white shrimp Penaeus indicus (H. Milne-Edwards, 1837), reared in a biofloc-based system with different protein levels of feed.

TL;DR: In this article, a 120 days growth trial was carried out using juvenile Penaeus indicus (0.71 ± 0.01) with dietary protein level, 25% (LP), 30% (MP), and 35% (HP), and a control diet-fed with 35% acted as control group resulting in 4 treatments each with four replicates and were randomly assigned 16 tank units (7500 L each).