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Female tilapia, Oreochromis sp. mobilised energy differently for growth and reproduction according to living environment.

Ros Suhaida RazaliSharifah RahmahYu Ling Shirly-LimMazlan Abd GhaffarSuhairi MazelanMohamad JalilahLeong-Seng LimYu Mei ChangLi Qun LiangYoung-Mao ChenHon Jung Liew
Published in: Scientific reports (2024)
This study was conducted to investigate the energy mobilisation preference and ionoregulation pattern of female tilapia, Oreochromis sp. living in different environments. Three different treatments of tilapia as physiology compromising model were compared; tilapia cultured in recirculating aquaculture system (RAS as Treatment I-RAS), tilapia cultured in open water cage (Treatment II-Cage) and tilapia transferred from cage and cultured in RAS (Treatment III-Compensation). Results revealed that tilapia from Treatment I and III mobilised lipid to support gonadogenesis, whilst Treatment II tilapia mobilised glycogen as primary energy for daily exercise activity and reserved protein for growth. The gills and kidney Na + /K + ATPase (NKA) activities remained relatively stable to maintain homeostasis with a stable Na + and K + levels. As a remark, this study revealed that tilapia strategized their energy mobilisation preference in accessing glycogen as an easy energy to support exercise metabolism and protein somatogenesis in cage culture condition, while tilapia cultured in RAS mobilised lipid for gonadagenesis purposes.
Keyphrases
  • endothelial cells
  • physical activity
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  • small molecule
  • minimally invasive
  • combination therapy
  • wild type
  • replacement therapy