Dietary lipid
supplementation affects the body fatty acid composition but not the growth
of juvenile river chub, Zacco barbata (Regan)
Chen-Huei Huang, Wen-Jiunn Shyong Way-Yee
Lin-2001
Aquaculture Research, 32(12): 1005-1010
Abstract:
A feeding trial was conducted to
investigate the effects of dietary lipid level on growth and body
composition of juvenile river chub, Zacco barbata (Regan). Juvenile
river chub with 0.26
g
body weight were given five isoenergetic and isonitrogenous purified diets
containing 0-20% lipids in 5% increments for 8
weeks.
The dietary lipid source was a 1:1 (w/w) mixture of menhaden fish oil and
soybean oil. There was no significant difference on weight gain, feed
conversion ratio, or protein efficiency ratio, among fish fed different
experimental diets (P
>
0.05).
Body fat contents of both initial fish and fish fed the diet containing 20%
dietary lipid were significantly greater than those fed other diets (P
<
0.05).
The percentage of total n-3 fatty acids in the body lipids of fish at
the beginning of the trial was 12.34%. This value decreased to 3.83% by the
end of the trial for fish fed a control diet with no supplemented lipid.
Similar trends were observed in linoleic acid contents that were 6.11% and
3.09%, respectively, for initial fish and the fish fed the control diet for
8
weeks.
However, the absolute amount of these fatty acids stayed the same in the
initial and in the control group. Meanwhile, as dietary lipid level
increased, the percentages of these fatty acids in body lipids of fish at
the end of the trial also increased.
(Department of Aquatic Biosciences,
National Chiayi University, 300 University Road, Chiayi, Taiwan, R.O.C.
E-mail: chuhuang@mail.ncyu.edu.tw)