Defatted biomass of the microalga, Desmodesmus sp., can replace fishmeal in the feeds for Atlantic salmon

Microalgal biomass is a potential feed ingredient that can replace fishmeal and ensure sustainability standards in aquaculture. To understand the efficacy of the defatted biomass from the marine microalga, Desmodesmus sp. a 70-day feeding study was performed with Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) smolts...

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Main Authors: Viswanath eKiron, Mette eSørensen, Mark eHuntley, Ghana K Vasanth, Yangyang eGong, Dalia eDahle, Anjana M. Palihawadana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmars.2016.00067/full
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spelling doaj-ac16fec70900452eaaec6348d900531f2020-11-25T00:18:28ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452016-05-01310.3389/fmars.2016.00067196478Defatted biomass of the microalga, Desmodesmus sp., can replace fishmeal in the feeds for Atlantic salmonViswanath eKiron0Mette eSørensen1Mark eHuntley2Mark eHuntley3Ghana K Vasanth4Yangyang eGong5Yangyang eGong6Dalia eDahle7Anjana M. Palihawadana8Nord UniversityNord UniversityCornell UniversityDuke UniversityNord UniversityNord UniversityEast China Sea Fisheries Research InstituteNord UniversityNord UniversityMicroalgal biomass is a potential feed ingredient that can replace fishmeal and ensure sustainability standards in aquaculture. To understand the efficacy of the defatted biomass from the marine microalga, Desmodesmus sp. a 70-day feeding study was performed with Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) smolts. Three groups of fish (av. wt. 167 g) were offered either a control feed (without the microalga) or the microalga-containing (10/20%) feeds. At the end of the feeding period, the growth indices (condition factor, specific growth rate) and survival of the microalga-fed fish were not significantly different from the respective values of the control fish, but the feed conversion ratios were inferior. The proximate composition of the whole body of salmon from the three groups did not vary significantly. Compared to the control fish, the alga-fed fish had lower lipid content (10% alga-fed fish) in their fillet. The protein and lipid digestibility in the three feeds did not differ significantly, but the digestibility of energy in the 10% alga-feed was significantly lower than that of the control feed. Furthermore, comparison of the distal intestinal proteome of Atlantic salmon revealed that the expressions of Alpha-2-HS-glycoprotein-like (Ahsg), Myosin-11 isoform X1 (My11) and Dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase, mitochondrial-like (Dld) were altered by the microalgal feeding. Examination of the physiological status of the fish based on the serum antioxidant capacities did not reveal any alga-feed-related differences. Moreover, the expression of the selected immune and inflammatory marker genes and the micromorphological observations did not indicate any aberration in the intestinal health of the microalga-fed fish. It is possible to include 20% of defatted Desmodesmus sp. in the feeds of Atlantic salmon.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmars.2016.00067/fullGrowthMicroalgaeAtlantic salmonIntestinal healthDesmodesmusFeed performance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Viswanath eKiron
Mette eSørensen
Mark eHuntley
Mark eHuntley
Ghana K Vasanth
Yangyang eGong
Yangyang eGong
Dalia eDahle
Anjana M. Palihawadana
spellingShingle Viswanath eKiron
Mette eSørensen
Mark eHuntley
Mark eHuntley
Ghana K Vasanth
Yangyang eGong
Yangyang eGong
Dalia eDahle
Anjana M. Palihawadana
Defatted biomass of the microalga, Desmodesmus sp., can replace fishmeal in the feeds for Atlantic salmon
Frontiers in Marine Science
Growth
Microalgae
Atlantic salmon
Intestinal health
Desmodesmus
Feed performance
author_facet Viswanath eKiron
Mette eSørensen
Mark eHuntley
Mark eHuntley
Ghana K Vasanth
Yangyang eGong
Yangyang eGong
Dalia eDahle
Anjana M. Palihawadana
author_sort Viswanath eKiron
title Defatted biomass of the microalga, Desmodesmus sp., can replace fishmeal in the feeds for Atlantic salmon
title_short Defatted biomass of the microalga, Desmodesmus sp., can replace fishmeal in the feeds for Atlantic salmon
title_full Defatted biomass of the microalga, Desmodesmus sp., can replace fishmeal in the feeds for Atlantic salmon
title_fullStr Defatted biomass of the microalga, Desmodesmus sp., can replace fishmeal in the feeds for Atlantic salmon
title_full_unstemmed Defatted biomass of the microalga, Desmodesmus sp., can replace fishmeal in the feeds for Atlantic salmon
title_sort defatted biomass of the microalga, desmodesmus sp., can replace fishmeal in the feeds for atlantic salmon
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Microalgal biomass is a potential feed ingredient that can replace fishmeal and ensure sustainability standards in aquaculture. To understand the efficacy of the defatted biomass from the marine microalga, Desmodesmus sp. a 70-day feeding study was performed with Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) smolts. Three groups of fish (av. wt. 167 g) were offered either a control feed (without the microalga) or the microalga-containing (10/20%) feeds. At the end of the feeding period, the growth indices (condition factor, specific growth rate) and survival of the microalga-fed fish were not significantly different from the respective values of the control fish, but the feed conversion ratios were inferior. The proximate composition of the whole body of salmon from the three groups did not vary significantly. Compared to the control fish, the alga-fed fish had lower lipid content (10% alga-fed fish) in their fillet. The protein and lipid digestibility in the three feeds did not differ significantly, but the digestibility of energy in the 10% alga-feed was significantly lower than that of the control feed. Furthermore, comparison of the distal intestinal proteome of Atlantic salmon revealed that the expressions of Alpha-2-HS-glycoprotein-like (Ahsg), Myosin-11 isoform X1 (My11) and Dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase, mitochondrial-like (Dld) were altered by the microalgal feeding. Examination of the physiological status of the fish based on the serum antioxidant capacities did not reveal any alga-feed-related differences. Moreover, the expression of the selected immune and inflammatory marker genes and the micromorphological observations did not indicate any aberration in the intestinal health of the microalga-fed fish. It is possible to include 20% of defatted Desmodesmus sp. in the feeds of Atlantic salmon.
topic Growth
Microalgae
Atlantic salmon
Intestinal health
Desmodesmus
Feed performance
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmars.2016.00067/full
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