Considering the diverse biological activities of condensed tannin (CT), the study aimed to evaluate the effect of CT on growth performance and intestinal health in juvenile largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) through a 56-day feeding trial. Largemouth bass (5.99 ± 0.03 g) were fed a basic diet supplemented with different levels of CT: 0 g/kg (the control group, CG), 0.60 g/kg (the T0.6 group), 1.50 g/kg (the T1.5 group), 3.75 g/kg (the T3.75 group), and 9.38 g/kg (the T9.38 group). The results indicated that dietary supplementation of CT at 3.75 g/kg promoted growth performance, feed conversion ratio, the apparent digestibility coefficients (ADCs) of crude protein and crude lipid, the crude protein of whole-body, the intestinal antioxidant capacity, and intestinal immune response, as well as the development of intestinal villi (P < 0.05), while the fish fed with 9.38 g/kg CT exhibited the opposite trend. Further, dietary CT (3.75 g/kg) decreased crude lipid in the whole-body compared to the CG (P < 0.05). Dietary CT (3.75 g/kg) altered the microbial community, the relative abundance of Bacillus and Lysinibacillus were increased compared to the CG. Additionally, the serum metabolome results revealed a negative correlation between Lysinibacillus abundance and lipid metabolites in the serum. These findings suggested that supplementing the diet with 3.75 g/kg CT promoted the growth performance, feed utilization, and intestinal health of largemouth bass. The optimum CT level was 4.15 g/kg based on second-order polynomial regression analyses of weight gain rate.
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