Three species of marine fish, sea bass, sea bream and turbot, and two salmonids, rainbow trout and brown trout, were raised under similar feeding and environmental conditions in order to compare their nitrogen utilisation. Apparent digestibility of protein, ammonia and urea excretion patterns, plasma ammonia and urea concentrations and liver arginase activities were measured. No differences in protein digestibility were noticed among the five species. Ammonia and urea losses were quantitatively similar in all species, except in turbot, in which ammonia production was significantly lower, Ammonia excretion patterns were linked to ingested nitrogen and showed no inter-species differences. Conversely, urea excretion patterns were specific in turbot and sea bream. Plasma urea levels were higher in marine fish than in salmonids, with the highest values being reached in turbot. Some specificity with regard to liver arginase was also detected in the turbot. Turbot demonstrated some metabolic characteristics that could be connected with its elevated position in the phylogeny of fish.