Bibliographie
Effect of feeding rate on fatty acid composition of sharpsnout seabream (Diplodus puntazzo)
Aquaculture Nutrition vol. 10 (5) pp. 301-307, 1 Oct 2004 Abstract The effects of different feeding rates on the lipids fatty acid profile of sharpsnout seabream (Diplodus puntazzo) tissues were studied. During a 15-day period, four fish groups were allowed to feed to satiation, at two-thirds and one-third of satiety, and starved, respectively. Reducing food intake progressively increased the n-3:n-6 relationship by increase of n-3 (mainly Highly Unsaturated Fatty Acids) and decrease of n-6 fatty acid percentages. In perivisceral fat, this n-3:n-6 value was already statistically significant lower for the group fed to satiety (1.29 versus 1.71, 1.80 and 1.65 for the two-third-fed, one-third-fed and fasted groups, respectively), whereas in the white muscle (1.69 versus 2.13 and 2.12) and liver (0.83 versus 1.40 and 2.66) the differences were statistically significant only for the one-third-fed and fasted groups. Linoleic acid was the main contributor to the n-6 drop, whereas the n-3 fatty acids preferentially preserved were for the most part essential fatty acids. Fat quality indices (thrombogenic and atherogenic) were not affected by food restriction except for liver, being the former significantly lower in the one-third-fed and fasted groups. Food intake restriction to one-third of satiety levels was enough to trigger the mechanisms that preserve essential fatty acids
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