The effect of seasonal temperature on endogenous gut enzyme activity in four air-breathing fish species

The digestion process in fish is a complex phenomenon and is accomplished with the help of both endogenous and exogenous enzymes. A wide range of enzymes have been reported in fish and their secretion and concentrations highly depend on feeding habits, gut structure and environmental conditions. In...

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Main Authors: Banerjee Goutam, Ray Arun Kumar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2018-06-01
Series:Croatian Journal of Fisheries
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/cjf-2018-0007
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spelling doaj-4870c50a75c446b897acd1f15b0b01062021-09-06T19:22:05ZengSciendoCroatian Journal of Fisheries1848-05862018-06-01762606510.2478/cjf-2018-0007cjf-2018-0007The effect of seasonal temperature on endogenous gut enzyme activity in four air-breathing fish speciesBanerjee Goutam0Ray Arun Kumar1Department of Zoology, Visva Bharati University, Santiniketan, West Bengal, India, 731235Department of Zoology, Visva Bharati University, Santiniketan, West Bengal, India, 731235The digestion process in fish is a complex phenomenon and is accomplished with the help of both endogenous and exogenous enzymes. A wide range of enzymes have been reported in fish and their secretion and concentrations highly depend on feeding habits, gut structure and environmental conditions. In this present investigation, we have demonstrated the activity of two endogenous enzymes (protease and amylase) in four economically important air-breathing fish species (Clarias batrachus, Channa punctatus, Anabas testudineus and Heteropneustes fossilis) at different seasonal temperatures. Our results demonstrated that protease activity was higher in all fish during the month of May, followed by September and December. It was also detected that enzyme activity was higher in the hindgut region (HG) compared to the foregut (FG), which suggests that HG is more active in digestion compared to FG. The optimization of feeding efficiency in aquaculture industries is very important, as the cost of feed is high and its availability is also limited. The information presented may be of importance when developing optimized diets and feeding regimes for the species considered.https://doi.org/10.2478/cjf-2018-0007air-breathing fishtemperatureenzyme activity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Banerjee Goutam
Ray Arun Kumar
spellingShingle Banerjee Goutam
Ray Arun Kumar
The effect of seasonal temperature on endogenous gut enzyme activity in four air-breathing fish species
Croatian Journal of Fisheries
air-breathing fish
temperature
enzyme activity
author_facet Banerjee Goutam
Ray Arun Kumar
author_sort Banerjee Goutam
title The effect of seasonal temperature on endogenous gut enzyme activity in four air-breathing fish species
title_short The effect of seasonal temperature on endogenous gut enzyme activity in four air-breathing fish species
title_full The effect of seasonal temperature on endogenous gut enzyme activity in four air-breathing fish species
title_fullStr The effect of seasonal temperature on endogenous gut enzyme activity in four air-breathing fish species
title_full_unstemmed The effect of seasonal temperature on endogenous gut enzyme activity in four air-breathing fish species
title_sort effect of seasonal temperature on endogenous gut enzyme activity in four air-breathing fish species
publisher Sciendo
series Croatian Journal of Fisheries
issn 1848-0586
publishDate 2018-06-01
description The digestion process in fish is a complex phenomenon and is accomplished with the help of both endogenous and exogenous enzymes. A wide range of enzymes have been reported in fish and their secretion and concentrations highly depend on feeding habits, gut structure and environmental conditions. In this present investigation, we have demonstrated the activity of two endogenous enzymes (protease and amylase) in four economically important air-breathing fish species (Clarias batrachus, Channa punctatus, Anabas testudineus and Heteropneustes fossilis) at different seasonal temperatures. Our results demonstrated that protease activity was higher in all fish during the month of May, followed by September and December. It was also detected that enzyme activity was higher in the hindgut region (HG) compared to the foregut (FG), which suggests that HG is more active in digestion compared to FG. The optimization of feeding efficiency in aquaculture industries is very important, as the cost of feed is high and its availability is also limited. The information presented may be of importance when developing optimized diets and feeding regimes for the species considered.
topic air-breathing fish
temperature
enzyme activity
url https://doi.org/10.2478/cjf-2018-0007
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