Marine Fish Oil Replacement with Lard or Basa Fish ( Pangasius bocourti ) Offal Oil in the Diet of Tiger Puffer ( Takifugu rubripes ): Effects on Growth Performance, Body Composition, and Flesh Quality.
Guoxu LiuLin LiShuqing SongQiang MaYuliang WeiMengqing LiangHouguo XuPublished in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2024)
Lard (LD) and Basa fish offal oil (BFO) have similar fatty acid profiles, both containing high contents of saturated fatty acids (SFA) and monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA). The present study aimed to investigate the efficacy of partial or complete replacement of marine fish oil (MFO, herring oil) by LD or BFO in the diets of tiger puffer. The control diet contained 49.1% crude protein and 9.28% crude lipid content including 6% added MFO. In other diets, 1/3, 2/3, and 3/3 of the added MFO was replaced by LD or BFO, respectively. Each diet was fed to triplicate tanks of juvenile fish (initial body weight, 13.88 g). A 46-day feeding trial was conducted in a flow-through seawater system. Each diet was fed to triplicate 200-L rectangular polyethylene tanks, each of which was stocked with 30 fish. Fish were fed to satiation three times a day. The complete replacement of added MFO (replacing 65% of the total crude lipid) had no adverse effects on fish growth performance in terms of survival (>94%), weight gain (360-398%), feed intake (2.37-3.04%), feed conversion ratio (0.84-1.02), and somatic indices. The dietary LD or BFO supplementation also had marginal effects on fish body proximate composition, biochemical parameters, muscle texture, and water-holding ability, as well as the hepatic expression of lipid metabolism-related genes. Partial (2/3) replacement of added MFO by LD or BFO did not significantly reduce the muscle n-3 LC-PUFA content, indicating the n-3 LC-PUFA sparing effects of SFA and MUFA in LD and BFO. In general, dietary LD or BFO reduced the peroxidation level and led to significant changes in the muscle volatile flavor compound profile, which were probably attributed to the change in fatty acid composition. The results of this study evidenced that LD and BFO are good potential lipid sources for tiger puffer feeds.
Keyphrases
- fatty acid
- weight loss
- body composition
- weight gain
- physical activity
- body weight
- skeletal muscle
- clinical trial
- mass spectrometry
- body mass index
- poor prognosis
- randomized controlled trial
- drinking water
- birth weight
- simultaneous determination
- phase iii
- risk assessment
- small molecule
- amino acid
- double blind
- solid phase extraction
- molecularly imprinted