6 results match your criteria: "Research Centre for Aquaculture and Fisheries[Affiliation]"
Ecol Evol
September 2023
Department of Agroecology Flakkebjerg Research Center, Aarhus University Slagelse Denmark.
The growth of the human population brought about the global intensification of aquacultural production, and aquaculture became the fastest growing animal husbandry sector. Effluent from aquaculture is an anthropogenic environmental burden, containing organic matter, nutrients and suspended solids that affect water quality especially in the water bodies of high biodiversity and conservation value. Water quality assessment often relies on bioindicators, analysing changes in taxonomic diversity of various freshwater organismal groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAquac Nutr
October 2022
Research Centre for Aquaculture and Fisheries (HAKI), Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Anna liget u. 35, Szarvas, Hungary.
A digestibility trial was conducted with African catfish hybrid juveniles in order to determine the apparent digestibility coefficients (ADCs) of different nutrients. The experimental diets contained defatted black soldier fly (BSL), yellow mealworm (MW), or fully fat blue bottle fly (BBF) meals, in a 70 : 30 ratio between the control diet and the tested insect meals. The indirect method for the digestibility study was performed using 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnim Reprod Sci
December 2022
Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Institute of Aquaculture and Environmental Safety, Research Centre for Aquaculture and Fisheries, Anna-Liget Str. 35, H-5540 Szarvas, Hungary.
Sterlet Acipenser ruthenus is the smallest in size, early maturing, yet third in production scale among the sturgeon species and as such presents a good model to study reproductive biology. The present study aimed to evaluate the effects of preseason artificial reproduction and reduction of hormonal dosage on the egg quality in pond-reared sterlet. Therefore, a series of three trials were conducted in the period 2021 and 2022 (21 and 22) that evaluated three dosages of mammalian gonadotropin releasing hormone analog des-Gly-(d-Ala)-GnRH (40, 20, and 10 µg/kg) in both preseason (January) and seasonal (April) spawning batches (PRE and SEA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntibiotics (Basel)
October 2022
Agribiotechnology and Precision Breeding for Food Security National Laboratory, Institute of Genetics and Biotechnology, Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences, 2100 Gödöllő, Hungary.
The aim of this study was metagenomics analyses of acquired antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs) in the intestinal microbiome of two important food-animal species in Hungary from a One Health perspective. Intestinal content samples were collected from 12 domestic pigs () and from a common carp (). Shotgun metagenomic sequencing of DNA purified from the intestinal samples was performed on the Illumina platform.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
January 2022
Feeds & Foods Nutrition Research Center, Pukyong National University, Busan 48547, Korea.
Recent research is increasingly shedding light on the important role that microbial metabolites such as γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) play in the context of nutrition, cognition, immune function, and the modulation of the gut microbiome. Yet, very few trials were conducted to assess the effects of its supplementation on biomarkers of fish health. Therefore, an eight-week feeding trial was devised to evaluate GABA supplementation in juvenile olive flounder, ().
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnim Reprod Sci
March 2022
Department of Gamete and Embryo Biology, Institute of Animal Reproduction and Food Research of Polish Academy of Sciences, Tuwima 10 Str., Olsztyn 10-748, Poland.
Seasonal reproduction of domesticated pikeperch has been the most critical spawning batch in several European countries. The present study aimed to monitor oocyte growth between mid-November and seasonal spawning to evaluate if oocyte growth trends may predict egg quality. Nineteen sexually mature females were monitored for oocyte sizes every two months.
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