Publication | Closed Access
Compensatory growth response of Sparus aurata following different starvation and refeeding protocols
78
Citations
25
References
2006
Year
NutritionSparus AurataFeeding TrialPlant Growth RegulatorAquatic Food SystemLactationFeed AdditivePublic HealthAquatic Animal NutritionHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyCompensatory Growth ResponseAnimal NutritionFeed EvaluationGrowth TrajectoriesBiologyRefeeding ProtocolsPhysiologyFeed IntakeDifferent StarvationMetabolismMeat Science
A feeding trial evaluated the influences of different cycles of starvation and refeeding protocols for 7 weeks on growth and feed intake in 14-g gilthead sea bream, Sparus aurata. Following 7 weeks of alternated cycles, all the groups were fed to apparent satiation for a further 3 weeks. Three groups of fish were fasted for 2, 4 or 7 days (S2, S4 and S7, respectively) and then refed until their relative feed intake differed by less than 20% of fed controls until the end of the week 7, while a fourth group (S7/Rf14) experienced three cycles, each consisting of 1 week of food deprivation followed by 2 weeks of satiation feeding. Control (C) fish were fed to satiation throughout the trial. The fish were fed a sea bream diet (450 g kg−1 crude protein) according to the protocols, twice a day for 7 weeks. Growth performance and feed intake in continuously fed control group were significantly higher than those of the deprived groups (S2, S4, S7 and S7/Rf14) (P < 0.05). Weight gain highly correlated with total feed intake (R2 = 94), and feed efficiency was the highest in the control group than other deprived groups (P < 0.05). The juveniles of gilthead sea bream demonstrated only a partial compensation during the cycling period and even after being fed to satiation for another 3 weeks. The convergence of growth trajectories and subsequent hyperphagic responses of the groups fed according to protocols are discussed in terms of possible costs of compensatory growth.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1