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Fasting and refeeding lead to more efficient growth in lean pacu ( Piaractus mesopotamicus )
Author(s) -
Favero Gisele Cristina,
Gimbo Rodrigo Yukihiro,
Franco Montoya Luz Natália,
Zanuzzo Fábio Sabbadin,
Urbinati Elisabeth Criscuolo
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
aquaculture research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.646
H-Index - 89
eISSN - 1365-2109
pISSN - 1355-557X
DOI - 10.1111/are.13466
Subject(s) - pacu , glycogen , biology , piaractus mesopotamicus , medicine , lipolysis , endocrinology , feed conversion ratio , weight gain , zoology , adipose tissue , fishery , body weight
We evaluated whether body fat content affects the energetic metabolism and growth in pacu submitted to daily feeding, fasting and refeeding. For 15 days, fish were fed different diets to obtain lean and fat conditions, and then subjected, for 20 days to: (1) continuously feeding (control), or (2) fasting for 15 days and refeeding for 5 days. Blood (glucose, triglycerides, cholesterol, non‐esterified fatty acids and total protein) and tissue (liver lipid and glycogen, muscle lipid and mesenteric fat) metabolic indicators, and growth performance parameters (weight gain, specific growth rate, daily feed intake and feed conversion ratio) were measured. Fasting led both lean and fat pacu to make notable use of their energy reserves, through glycogenolysis and lipolysis, reflected in reduced blood glucose and triglycerides, liver glycogen and muscle lipid levels. Lipolysis was confirmed by the high levels of non‐esterified fatty acids, especially in fat pacu. Refeeding led to higher plasma glucose and liver lipid in lean fish. Muscle fat increased in fat fish but was not restored in lean fish, while mesenteric fat index (MFI) remained the same in fat fish and increased in lean fish. Although refeeding occurred only for 5 days, lean fish grew more and were more efficient at utilizing food (higher weight gain and better feed conversion ratio). In conclusion, our results suggest that fat pacu have higher glycogenic and lipogenic abilities, and the higher deposition of lipids in fish does not mean higher availability of energy for growth when compensatory growth is stimulated by refeeding after fasting.

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