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Effects of Dietary Phosphorus Levels on Growth Performance, Phosphorus Utilization and Intestinal Calcium and Phosphorus Transport-Related Genes Expression of Juvenile Chinese Soft-Shelled Turtle (Pelodiscus sinensis)

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Phosphorus is a vitally important mineral to ensure healthy growth for aquaculture animals, but is also the main contributor to eutrophication. To guarantee green and high-quality development of the aquaculture industry, it is crucial to quantify the dietary phosphorus requirement of...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wang, Yue, Geng, Yiran, Shi, Xueying, Wang, Siqi, Yang, Zhencai, Zhang, Peiyu, Liu, Haiyan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9687074/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36428331
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12223101
Descripción
Sumario:SIMPLE SUMMARY: Phosphorus is a vitally important mineral to ensure healthy growth for aquaculture animals, but is also the main contributor to eutrophication. To guarantee green and high-quality development of the aquaculture industry, it is crucial to quantify the dietary phosphorus requirement of cultured species. In this study, we assessed the influence of four experimental diets containing different phosphorus levels on the juvenile Chinese soft-shelled turtle (Pelodiscus sinensis). The results indicated that the available phosphorus requirement of juvenile P. sinensis was 1.041%. Lower or higher dietary phosphorus level negatively affected growth and feed utilization of the turtles. Furthermore, intake of high-phosphorus diets also led to significantly higher phosphorus discharge into the water body. ABSTRACT: A 60-day feeding trial was performed to assess the effects of dietary phosphorus levels on growth performance, body composition, phosphorus utilization, plasma physiological parameters and intestinal Ca and P transport-related gene expression of juvenile Chinese soft-shelled turtle (P. sinensis). Four diets containing available P at graded levels of 0.88%, 1.00%, 1.18% and 1.63% (termed as D0.88, D1.00, D1.18 and D1.63, respectively) were formulated and each diet was fed to turtles (5.39 ± 0.02 g) in sextuplicate. The turtles were randomly distributed to 24 tanks with 8 turtles per tank. The results indicated that final body weight, specific growth rate, feed conversion ratio and protein efficiency ratio performed best in turtles fed 1.00% available P diet. The crude lipids of the whole body exhibited a decreasing trend with the dietary available P, whereas the calcium and phosphorus of the whole body and bone phosphorus showed an opposite tendency. The apparent digestibility coefficient of phosphorus declined with the dietary available P. Turtles fed 1.00% available phosphorus had the highest phosphorus retention ratio compared with other treatments. Simultaneously they had significantly lower phosphorus loss than turtles fed D1.18 and D1.63 and had no differences in this respect from turtles fed a low-phosphorus diet. It was noteworthy that the lowest plasma calcium concentrations, and alkaline phosphatase activities in plasma and liver, were discovered in turtles fed the diet containing 1.63% available phosphorus. In addition, the high-phosphorus diet resulted in significantly down-regulated expression of intestinal phosphorus and calcium transport-related key genes. In conclusion, the available phosphorus requirement of juvenile P. sinensis was determined at 1.041% (total phosphorus was 1.80%) based on quadratic regression of weight gain rate, and excessive dietary phosphorus stunted turtle growth possibly via inhibiting intestinal calcium absorption.