AI Article Synopsis

  • The experiment tested how different lipid-to-carbohydrate ratios in diets affect growth and metabolism in juvenile cobia, using six distinct diets with varying ratios.
  • Results showed that a higher lipid-to-carbohydrate ratio (like D1) led to poorer weight gain and protein efficiency, while the optimal ratio of 0.47 (D4) showed better survival rates and nutrient retention.
  • Findings suggest that juvenile cobia prefer carbohydrates for energy over lipids, indicating that a diet with a 0.47 lipid-to-carbohydrate ratio is most effective for their growth and health.

Article Abstract

This experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of dietary lipid-to-carbohydrate ratio on growth and carbohydrate metabolism in juvenile cobia (). Six isonitrogenous diets were prepared to vary in lipid-to-carbohydrate ratio (g/g) as follows: D1, 2.26; D2, 1.31; D3, 0.78; D4, 0.47; D5, 0.34; and D6, 0.23. Cobias were fed to satiety for 8 weeks. The weight gain and protein efficiency ratio in D1 group were significantly lower than those in other groups ( < 0.05), accompanied by a lower level of feed conversion ratio ( < 0.05). Protein retention efficiency in D4 and D6 and whole body protein in D4 and D5 were significantly higher than those in D1 group ( < 0.05). Survival rate in D4 group was the highest among all groups and was significantly higher than that in D1, D2 and D5 ( < 0.05). In terms of serum triglyceride, D1 and D2 were significantly higher than D6 ( < 0.05). Hepatosomatic index in D3 and D4 was significantly lower than that in D1 ( < 0.05). Fructose-1,6-diphosphatase in D4 was significantly higher than that in D1 and D3 ( < 0.05). Phosphofructokinase in D3 and D4 and malic enzyme in D4 and D5 were significantly higher than those in other groups ( < 0.05). Results indicate that cobia utilizes carbohydrates as energy source more efficiently than it utilizes lipids. The optimal lipid-to-carbohydrate ratio in juvenile cobia diets is 0.47.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7082676PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aninu.2019.11.010DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The experiment tested how different lipid-to-carbohydrate ratios in diets affect growth and metabolism in juvenile cobia, using six distinct diets with varying ratios.
  • Results showed that a higher lipid-to-carbohydrate ratio (like D1) led to poorer weight gain and protein efficiency, while the optimal ratio of 0.47 (D4) showed better survival rates and nutrient retention.
  • Findings suggest that juvenile cobia prefer carbohydrates for energy over lipids, indicating that a diet with a 0.47 lipid-to-carbohydrate ratio is most effective for their growth and health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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