1. Low temperature stress in a cultured fish (Piaractus mesopotamicus) fed with Pyropia columbina red seaweed-supplemented diet
- Author
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Carla Bacchetta, Pablo Augusto Scarabotti, Andrea Silvana Rossi, Jimena Cazenave, and Analía Ale
- Subjects
Fish Proteins ,Gills ,Gill ,Antioxidant ,Physiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Aquatic Science ,medicine.disease_cause ,Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances ,Biochemistry ,Piaractus mesopotamicus ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Aquaculture ,medicine ,Animals ,Intestinal Mucosa ,music ,Glutathione Transferase ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,music.instrument ,biology ,Pyropia columbina ,Superoxide Dismutase ,business.industry ,Cholesterol ,Cold-Shock Response ,Muscles ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Juvenile fish ,Lipid Metabolism ,Seaweed ,biology.organism_classification ,Diet ,Oxidative Stress ,Glutathione Reductase ,Liver ,chemistry ,Dietary Supplements ,Rhodophyta ,040102 fisheries ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Characiformes ,business ,Glycogen ,Oxidative stress - Abstract
This study aimed to analyze the cold stress effects (in terms of hematology, energy reserves, and oxidative stress) in Piaractus mesopotamicus (pacú) and their mitigation by a Pyropia columbina red seaweed-supplemented diet. For this purpose, juvenile fish were fed with a control (CD) or a red seaweed-supplemented diet (RD) for 60 days, and then, the animals were exposed to a low temperature (14 °C) and a control temperature (24 °C) for 24 h. The cold shock generated an increase of hemoglobin levels in fish fed with both diets. In CD-fed fish, plasmatic triglycerides, cholesterol, and hepatic glycogen decreased after the thermal shock; meanwhile, the animals fed with RD showed decreased hepatic proteins, but increased cholesterol and hepatic glycogen. Regarding oxidative stress, antioxidant enzymes augmented their activity in the liver, intestine, and gills; meanwhile, lipid oxidative damage was observed in the liver and intestine of fish exposed to 14 °C and fed with both diets. Pacú was sensitive to cold shock, but no mitigation effects were observed in fish fed with the supplemented diet. Further research should target higher concentrations of P. columbina in supplemented diets to take advantage of this valuable resource.
- Published
- 2021
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