AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how adding dietary cholesterol might help salmon cope with the stress of rising temperatures due to climate change, focusing on its effects on growth and survival.
  • Salmon were subjected to a controlled temperature increase over several weeks while being fed either a regular diet or diets with additional cholesterol.
  • Findings showed that dietary cholesterol had minimal impact on growth and stress levels, though one cholesterol diet slightly reduced survival rates, indicating that some salmon can still thrive in warmer conditions.

Article Abstract

The salmon aquaculture industry must be proactive at developing mitigation tools/strategies to offset the potential negative impacts of climate change. Therefore, this study examined if additional dietary cholesterol could enhance salmon production at elevated temperatures. We hypothesized that supplemental cholesterol could aid in maintaining cell rigidity, reducing stress and the need to mobilize astaxanthin muscle stores, and improving salmon growth and survival at high rearing temperatures. Accordingly, postsmolt female triploid salmon were exposed to an incremental temperature challenge (+0.2°C day) to mimic conditions that they experience in sea cages in the summer, with temperature held at both 16 and 18°C for several weeks [i.e., 3 weeks at 16°C, followed by an increase at 0.2°C day to 18°C (10 days), then 5 weeks at 18°C] to prolong their exposure to elevated temperatures. From 16°C onwards, the fish were fed either a control diet, or one of two nutritionally equivalent experimental diets containing supplemental cholesterol [+1.30%, experimental diet 1 (ED1); or +1.76%, experimental diet 2 (ED2)]. Adding cholesterol to the diet did not affect the salmon's incremental thermal maximum (IT), growth, plasma cortisol, or liver stress-related transcript expression. However, ED2 appeared to have a small negative impact on survival, and both ED1 and ED2 reduced fillet "bleaching" above 18°C as measured using SalmoFan™ scores. Although the current results suggest that supplementing salmon diets with cholesterol would have few/minimal benefits for the industry, ≤ 5% of the female triploid Atlantic salmon used in this study irrespective of diet died before temperature reached 22°C. These latter data suggest that it is possible to produce all female populations of reproductively sterile salmon that can withstand summer temperatures in Atlantic Canada.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9973203PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/6336060DOI Listing

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