4.5 Article

Effects of astaxanthin on Brachionus manjavacas (Rotifera) population growth

Journal

AQUACULTURE RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 6, Pages 2278-2287

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/are.13688

Keywords

astaxanthin; larviculture; oleoresin; oxidative stress; Rotifera

Categories

Funding

  1. Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Biological Sciences

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Astaxanthin is a red secondary carotenoid and powerful antioxidant that is used in aquaculture to enhance colour and improve fish health. Brachionid rotifers are often used as a live feed for larval fish, but do not contain endogenous carotenoids. However, they can be enriched with astaxanthin through their diet and transfer it to larval predators. When supplemented with 2 mu g/ml astaxanthin oleoresin extracted from the green alga Haematococcus pluvialis, Brachionus manjavacas rotifer cultures reached significantly higher population densities and maintained them for longer. Furthermore, data are presented that exposure to oleoresin or pure astaxanthin enhances rotifer resistance to oxidative stress, a common cause for the collapse of rotifer mass cultures. Astaxanthin can be visualized in the gut of the rotifers, allowing the time course of uptake to be estimated by image analysis. Using this method, it was found that accumulation of astaxanthin in the rotifer gut saturates after 1.5 hr of exposure. The bioactive dose of astaxanthin oleoresin for rotifers was found to be 1-20 mu g/ml. Astaxanthin concentration in rotifer tissues was measured using absorbance ectrophotometry. It was found that treating rotifers with 20 mu g/ml for 24 hr; the concentration of astaxanthin absorbed into rotifer tissues was 2.6 mg/g. Overall, these experiments indicate that astaxanthin extracted from H.pluvialis can be used to improve the productivity and stability of rotifer mass cultures by increasing oxidative stress resistance and enhance the nutritional content of rotifers for larval fish.

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