4.7 Article

Insect and single-cell protein meals as replacers of fish meal in low fish meal and fish oil diets for gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata) juveniles

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AQUACULTURE
卷 566, 期 -, 页码 -

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DOI: 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2022.739215

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Insect meal; Single -cell protein; Methylococcus capsulatus; Fish meal

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In recent years, aquaculture research and industry have been searching for novel alternatives to fish meal to make fish feeds more effective and sustainable. Insect meals and single-cell proteins from bacteria have shown promise, but their effects on gilthead sea bream have not been thoroughly studied. This study evaluated the effects of replacing fish meal with insect meal or single-cell protein in practical diets for gilthead sea bream juveniles.
In recent years, the aquaculture research and industry has undertaken intensive efforts to identify novel alternatives to fish meal, in an attempt to convert fish feeds to more effective and sustainable, in response to the continuous growth of this sector. Among the several potential candidates, insect meals and single-cell proteins from bacteria have shown some of the most promising results, but they have not been thoroughly validated in gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata). Therefore, the aim of the present study was to evaluate how performance, protein digestibility in vitro, fish body composition and the expression of some gut health-related genes were affected by the replacement of 33% and 66% of fish meal by either the black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens) insect meal (INS5, INS10 diets), or the single-cell protein from the bacteria Methylococcus capsulatus (SCP5, SCP10 diets) in practical diets for gilthead sea bream juveniles, after a nutritional trial of 112 days. The single-cell protein product supported gilthead sea bream growth and feed utilization and allowed up to 66% of replacement of the dietary fish meal. In contrast, the insect meal product led to a reduced growth and worsened feed utilization when included at the highest dietary level (10%), making possible to replace fish meal only up to 33%. Proximate composition and amino acid profile were not majorly affected by the experimental diets, but moderate inclusions of the single cell protein from M. capsulatus (5%) significantly increased the fish fillet contents of important fatty acids for human nutrition, like 20:5n-3 and 22:6n-3, possibly related with a higher n-3 LC-PUFA sparing effect resulting from and optimized ratio of saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids. The relative expressions of some molecular makers related with fish gut health (hsp90, hsp70, mchii, cox-2, tnfa, il-1b) were also similar, irrespective of the dietary treatment.

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