AI Article Synopsis

  • A study on Pagrus major fingerlings showed that adding a combination of Lactobacillus rhamnosus and Lactococcus lactis to their diet improved feed utilization and growth performance compared to control and individual probiotic diets.
  • Fish fed the mixed probiotic diet had higher levels of beneficial traits such as increased lactic acid bacteria counts, plasma protein, and antioxidant activity.
  • The combination of these probiotics not only enhanced growth and protein digestibility but also resulted in lower cholesterol and triglyceride levels, suggesting it could be a beneficial feed additive in aquaculture.

Article Abstract

Pagrus major fingerlings (3·29 ± 0·02 g) were fed with basal diet (control) supplemented with Lactobacillus rhamnosus (LR), Lactococcus lactis (LL), and L. rhamnosus + L. lactis (LR + LL) at 10(6) cell g(-1) feed for 56 days. Feeding a mixture of LR and LL significantly increased feed utilization (FER and PER), intestine lactic acid bacteria (LAB) count, plasma total protein, alternative complement pathway (ACP), peroxidase, and mucus secretion compared with the other groups (P < 0.05). Serum lysozyme activity (LZY) significantly increased in LR + LL when compared with the control group. Additionally, fish fed the LR + LL diet showed a higher growth performance (Fn wt, WG, and SGR) and protein digestibility than the groups fed an individual LR or the control diet. Superoxide dismutase (SOD) significantly increased in LR and LR + LL groups when compared with the other groups. Moreover, the fish fed LR or LL had better improvement (P < 0.05) in growth, feed utilization, body protein and lipid contents, digestibility coefficients (dry matter, protein, and lipid), protease activity, total intestine and LAB counts, hematocrit, total plasma protein, biological antioxidant potential, ACP, serum and mucus LZY and bactericidal activities, peroxidase, SOD, and mucus secretion than the control group. Interestingly, fish fed diets with LR + LL showed significantly lower total cholesterol and triglycerides when compared with the other groups (P < 0.05). These data strongly suggest that a mixture of LR and LL probiotics may serve as a healthy immunostimulating feed additive in red sea bream aquaculture.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fsi.2015.12.047DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

lactobacillus rhamnosus
8
lactococcus lactis
8
pagrus major
8
effects dietary
4
dietary supplementation
4
supplementation lactobacillus
4
rhamnosus or/and
4
or/and lactococcus
4
lactis growth
4
growth gut
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!