Fish Responses to Alternative Feeding Ingredients under Abiotic Chronic Stress
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Abiotic Chronic Stress Response and Feeding Intervention
2.1. Somatic Growth
2.2. Metabolic and Cellular Markers
2.3. Oxidative Stress
2.4. Immune Response
Nutrient | Supplementation | Specie | Chronic Stress Factor | Observation | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tryptophan | Argyrosomus regius | Crowding and netting stress for four months | 0.25% Trp | No affects body weight, maintain glucose, lactate, and cortisol level ↓ Cortisol in mucus skin ↓ Plasma lactate | [38] |
Tryptophan | Oncorhynchus mykiss | High density for 70 days | 5 g Trp per kg diet | ↑ Lysozyme ↑ Bactericidal activity ↓ CAT and MDA | [33] |
Methionine, Lysine, Tryptophan, Threonine | Oncorhynchus mykiss | For six weeks, two times per week, handling stress 30 s of chasing, followed by capture in nets, removal from tanks, and 30 s of air exposure | 0.17% DL-Methionine 0.81% L-Lysine sulfate 0.22% L-Tryptophan 0.20% L-Threonine | ||
Phenylalanine | Sparus aurata | Confinement and netting/chasing stress 5 min 3 times a day | 5% Phe | ↓ Plasma lactate | [41] |
Magnesium and selenium nanoparticles | Lates calcarifer | Freshwater | 4 mg NanoSe/kg diet 500 mg NanoMg/kg diet | ↑ Final weight, weight gain, SGR, feed intake ↑ IgM and ACH50 ↑ ALT, AST ↓ Glucose | [48] |
Nucleotides | Hybrid stripe bass Morone chrysops × Morone saxatilis | Salinity of 15 g/L for four weeks | 0.5% de Adenosine 5′-monophosphate | ↓ Blood glucose ↑ Weight gain ↑ Lysozyme activity, anti-protease activity | [72] |
Vitamin E and NanoSe | Oncorhynchus mykiss | Dense stocking density (80 kg/m3) 60 days | 500 mg/kg Vit E and 1 mg/kg nano Se | Final Weight ↑ SGR ↑ FCR ↑ Cortisol ↓ Lactate ↓ ALT ↓ AST ↓ ALP ↓ | [73] |
NanoSe, Vitiamin C and E | Oncorhynchus mykiss | Sublethal concentration of ammonia exposure (0.024 mg/L) | 0.2 mg/kg NanoSe, 200 mg/kg Vitamin C and 60 mg/kg Vitamin E | ↑ final weight, ↓ FCR ↓ AST and ALP ↑ ALT, TAG, IMg Lysozyme | [52] |
DHA/EPA | Salmo sala | Three weeks with an unpredictable chronic stress (UCS) protocol | 25 g/kg EPA 14.2 g/kg total fatty acids | ↑ weight gain ↓ mucosal fold height, enterocyte height, and vacuolization Gene expression related to environmental information processing | [74] |
n-6/n-3 | Salmo salar | Hypoxia 3 times per week, during four weeks | Diet 6 46.7% LA 18:2n-6 0.1%ARA 20:4n-6 3.1%18:3n-3 2.0% EPA 20:5n-3 1.8% DHA 22:6n-3 3.8% EPA + DHA | Suppressed cortisol response. ↑ Level of eicosanoid PGD2 in liver ↑ level or leukotrienes LTB4 1 h after acute stress, LTB4 was the eicosanoid with the highest concentration before the acute stressor. ↓ IGF-1 was significantly lower | [75] |
S. cerevisiae | Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) | Heat and hypoxia, Dynamic heat stress 0.01 °C per min up to 40 °C Static heat stress from 40 °C to 28 °C for 90 min Exposure to glyphosate and/or malathion Hypoxia stress all consume of oxygen (0 mg/L) for 24 h | 50–70% S. cerevisiae | ↑ survival | [76] |
Selenium yeast supplementation | Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) | 60 days against the harmful effects of glyphosate and/or malathion chronic toxicity | Selenium yeast supplementation 3.3 mg/kg diet (2.36 mg/kg selenomethionine and 0.94 mg organic selenium) | ↑ survival ↑ growth ↑ SGR, ↓ FCR ↑ protection for free radicals | [77] |
Spent oleaginous yeast | Juvenile red sea bream (Pagrus major) | Low salinity water (0.2%) The test was terminated when all the fish died. | 2.5%, 25 g/kg supplement spent oleaginous yeast | ↑ FW, SGR ↓ FCR ↑ SOD, GPx, IgM, and Lysozyme activity Maintain values of MDA | [78] |
Dietary selenium yeast and tea-polyphenols | Juvenile Wuchang bream (Megalobrama amblycephala) | Ammonia stress 22.5 mg/L ammonia | Dietary selenium yeast and tea-polyphenols | ↓ Cortisol, TNFα, IL-1β, ↓ GPx ↑ CAT | [53] |
Bacillus circulans PB7 (BCPB7) and Fructoligosaccharide | Juveniles Labeo rohita | Low pH for 60 days | ↑ WG, SGR ↓FCR ↑ Lysozyme activity ↓ Cortisol ↓ HSP70 | [71] | |
B. coagulants | Common carp (Cyprinus carpio) | Long-term exposure to Cd2+ 30 and 60 days | 2.0 × 108 CFU/g of B. coagulants in diet | Activation of Nrf gene family for resistance to oxidative stress and immune response | [79] |
Clostridium autoethanogenum | Largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) | Clostridium autoethanogenum | [80] |
3. Discussion
3.1. Feeding Intervention with Alternative Ingredients in Fish
3.2. Animal By-Products Meal
3.3. Bacteria
3.4. Fungal (Yeast, Filamentous Fungi, and Mushroom)
3.4.1. Filamentous Fungus
3.4.2. Mushroom Meal
3.5. Insect
3.6. Non-Conventional Plant Meal
4. Perspectives
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Stressors | Terminology | Reference |
---|---|---|
Netting, confinement, and flashlight | Chronic stress protocol | [25] |
Temperature, pH, turbidity, toxicants, pathogens, predators, handing | Environmental factors | [14] |
Temperature | Water quality variables | [27] |
Cold current, high temperature, low precipitation, ammonia, harmful algal blooms, warming | Abiotic factor | [28] |
Chemicals (insecticides, pesticides), dissolved oxygen, pH, temperature | Abiotic factor | [11] |
Temperature, chemical contamination, photoperiod, salinity | Abiotic factor | [29] |
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Sánchez-Velázquez, J.; Peña-Herrejón, G.A.; Aguirre-Becerra, H. Fish Responses to Alternative Feeding Ingredients under Abiotic Chronic Stress. Animals 2024, 14, 765. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14050765
Sánchez-Velázquez J, Peña-Herrejón GA, Aguirre-Becerra H. Fish Responses to Alternative Feeding Ingredients under Abiotic Chronic Stress. Animals. 2024; 14(5):765. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14050765
Chicago/Turabian StyleSánchez-Velázquez, Julieta, Guillermo Abraham Peña-Herrejón, and Humberto Aguirre-Becerra. 2024. "Fish Responses to Alternative Feeding Ingredients under Abiotic Chronic Stress" Animals 14, no. 5: 765. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14050765