Abstract
In practice, golden pompano (Trachinotus ovatus) reared in offshore cages may experience short-term fasting during extreme weather conditions, yet their physiological and biochemical responses remain poorly understood. To investigate the responses of this species to fasting, golden pompano weighing 138.0 ± 2.1 g were deprived of food for 0, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days, followed by assessments of body mass, somatic parameters, proximate composition, muscle glycogen, intestinal digestive enzymes, muscle amino acid and fatty acid profiles, nutritional value, and muscle texture and water holding capacity. Lower condition factor, hepatosomatic index, viscerosomatic index, hepatic glycogen, and intestinal activities of amylase, lipase and trypsin were found in the fasted fish than in the non-fasted fish, while a sharp decline in these parameters occurred on the first week of fasting. Fresh mass, dry mass, whole body and muscle contents of crude protein and lipid tended to decrease with prolonged fasting, while no statistical differences were found in these parameters between fish fasted for 7 days and the non-fasted fish. Furthermore, the decline rate of whole body crude lipid was consistently higher than that of whole body crude protein throughout the different stages of the 28-day fasting period, with the exception of the second week of fasting. No statistical differences were found in the total essential amino acids (∑EAA), non-essential amino acids (∑NEAA), ratio of ∑EAA to∑NEAA, chemical score, amino acid score, and essential amino acid index in the fasted fish compared to the non-fasted fish of group 0d. Fasting altered the muscle profile of SFA, MUFA and PUFA, sometimes reducing muscle springiness (groups 7d and 14d) and hardness (group 21d). Compared to non-fasted fish, fish fasted for 7 and 14 days exhibited statistically lower or equal drip loss, water loss rate, storage losses, and frozen exudate rate, whereas higher cooked meat rate. The above results indicate that during the 28-day fasting period, the visceral fat and hepatic glycogen are initially metabolized, followed by body proteins and lipids, to maintain the normal metabolism in fasted fish. Fasting has beneficial effects on the nutritional value of amino acids and fatty acids in muscle, although it modifies the muscle SFA, MUFA and PUFA composition and sometimes has negative effects on muscle texture. Considering the balance between body weight loss and flesh quality improvement, the duration of fasting for cultured golden pompano prior to harvesting should not exceed 14 days.
Published Version
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