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Physiological Response of Grower African Catfish to Dietary Black Soldier Fly and Mealworm Meal

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Sustainability and profitability of African catfish farming depends on a sustainable and cost-effective supply of feed. Fish meal is still used as the main dietary protein source in the practical diet of fish. However, the supply shortage and high cost are the limiting factors. Insec...

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Autores principales: Gebremichael, Askale, Kucska, Balázs, Ardó, László, Biró, Janka, Berki, Mária, Lengyel-Kónya, Éva, Tömösközi-Farkas, Rita, Egessa, Robert, Müller, Tamás, Gyalog, Gergő, Sándor, Zsuzsanna J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10044440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36978510
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13060968
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author Gebremichael, Askale
Kucska, Balázs
Ardó, László
Biró, Janka
Berki, Mária
Lengyel-Kónya, Éva
Tömösközi-Farkas, Rita
Egessa, Robert
Müller, Tamás
Gyalog, Gergő
Sándor, Zsuzsanna J.
author_facet Gebremichael, Askale
Kucska, Balázs
Ardó, László
Biró, Janka
Berki, Mária
Lengyel-Kónya, Éva
Tömösközi-Farkas, Rita
Egessa, Robert
Müller, Tamás
Gyalog, Gergő
Sándor, Zsuzsanna J.
author_sort Gebremichael, Askale
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Sustainability and profitability of African catfish farming depends on a sustainable and cost-effective supply of feed. Fish meal is still used as the main dietary protein source in the practical diet of fish. However, the supply shortage and high cost are the limiting factors. Insects may represent a promising candidate for fish feeding due to their low footprint production and nutritionally relevant properties. This study revealed that replacement of fish meal with black soldier fly did not negatively affect the production performance and metabolic response of African catfish growers. On the other hand, replacement with yellow mealworm may lead to the fish’s growth reduction and health problems. ABSTRACT: A six-week experiment was carried out to test the effects of total (100%) and partial (50%) replacement of fish meal in the diet of African catfish growers with black soldier fly (B) meal, yellow mealworm (M) meal, and a 1:1 combination of both (BM) on the production and health of fish. A total of 420 fish with an average initial body weight of 200 ± 0.5 g were randomly distributed in triplicate to seven diet groups (C, B50, B100, M50, M100, BM50, and BM100, respectively). The growth performance and feed utilization of fish fed with partial or total replacement levels of FM with B were not significantly affected (p > 0.05) during the 6 weeks of feeding. In contrast, significant differences were observed between the groups fed with a diet where FM was totally replaced with M meal and the control in terms of final body weight, specific growth rate, feed conversion ratio, protein efficiency ratio, and protein productive value. Among the blood plasma biochemistry parameters, total cholesterol exhibited a significant difference (p = 0.007) between the M treatments and the control diet. The fatty acid profile of the liver was changed with respect to the long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid content in all experimental groups. Parallel with this, the upregulation of elovl5 and fas genes in liver was found in all experimental groups compared to the control. Overall, this study shows that fish meal cannot be substituted with yellow mealworm meal in the practical diet of African catfish without compromising the growth, health and feed utilization parameters.
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spelling pubmed-100444402023-03-29 Physiological Response of Grower African Catfish to Dietary Black Soldier Fly and Mealworm Meal Gebremichael, Askale Kucska, Balázs Ardó, László Biró, Janka Berki, Mária Lengyel-Kónya, Éva Tömösközi-Farkas, Rita Egessa, Robert Müller, Tamás Gyalog, Gergő Sándor, Zsuzsanna J. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Sustainability and profitability of African catfish farming depends on a sustainable and cost-effective supply of feed. Fish meal is still used as the main dietary protein source in the practical diet of fish. However, the supply shortage and high cost are the limiting factors. Insects may represent a promising candidate for fish feeding due to their low footprint production and nutritionally relevant properties. This study revealed that replacement of fish meal with black soldier fly did not negatively affect the production performance and metabolic response of African catfish growers. On the other hand, replacement with yellow mealworm may lead to the fish’s growth reduction and health problems. ABSTRACT: A six-week experiment was carried out to test the effects of total (100%) and partial (50%) replacement of fish meal in the diet of African catfish growers with black soldier fly (B) meal, yellow mealworm (M) meal, and a 1:1 combination of both (BM) on the production and health of fish. A total of 420 fish with an average initial body weight of 200 ± 0.5 g were randomly distributed in triplicate to seven diet groups (C, B50, B100, M50, M100, BM50, and BM100, respectively). The growth performance and feed utilization of fish fed with partial or total replacement levels of FM with B were not significantly affected (p > 0.05) during the 6 weeks of feeding. In contrast, significant differences were observed between the groups fed with a diet where FM was totally replaced with M meal and the control in terms of final body weight, specific growth rate, feed conversion ratio, protein efficiency ratio, and protein productive value. Among the blood plasma biochemistry parameters, total cholesterol exhibited a significant difference (p = 0.007) between the M treatments and the control diet. The fatty acid profile of the liver was changed with respect to the long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid content in all experimental groups. Parallel with this, the upregulation of elovl5 and fas genes in liver was found in all experimental groups compared to the control. Overall, this study shows that fish meal cannot be substituted with yellow mealworm meal in the practical diet of African catfish without compromising the growth, health and feed utilization parameters. MDPI 2023-03-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10044440/ /pubmed/36978510 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13060968 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Gebremichael, Askale
Kucska, Balázs
Ardó, László
Biró, Janka
Berki, Mária
Lengyel-Kónya, Éva
Tömösközi-Farkas, Rita
Egessa, Robert
Müller, Tamás
Gyalog, Gergő
Sándor, Zsuzsanna J.
Physiological Response of Grower African Catfish to Dietary Black Soldier Fly and Mealworm Meal
title Physiological Response of Grower African Catfish to Dietary Black Soldier Fly and Mealworm Meal
title_full Physiological Response of Grower African Catfish to Dietary Black Soldier Fly and Mealworm Meal
title_fullStr Physiological Response of Grower African Catfish to Dietary Black Soldier Fly and Mealworm Meal
title_full_unstemmed Physiological Response of Grower African Catfish to Dietary Black Soldier Fly and Mealworm Meal
title_short Physiological Response of Grower African Catfish to Dietary Black Soldier Fly and Mealworm Meal
title_sort physiological response of grower african catfish to dietary black soldier fly and mealworm meal
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10044440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36978510
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13060968
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