4.5 Article

Improvement of growth and antioxidant status in Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus, fed diets supplemented with mushroom stalk waste hot water extract

Journal

AQUACULTURE RESEARCH
Volume 48, Issue 3, Pages 1146-1157

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/are.12956

Keywords

oxidative stress; fish feed; aquaculture; superoxide dismutase; catalase; Pleurotus spp

Categories

Funding

  1. [Vote PPP/PV065-2012A]
  2. [UMRG: RP005C/13AFR]

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Mushroom stalk waste (MSW) generated from the oyster mushroom industry is drastically increasing and safe disposal of MSW is becoming a critical issue worldwide. Mushrooms are an established, excellent source of nutraceuticals and antioxidants, and therefore MSW may confer similar effects when consumed. The severe deterioration of aquatic habitat may compromise the homoeostasis of antioxidative metabolism of Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus, which resulted in a reduced total production. Based on this paradigm, hot water extracts (HWE, 2- and 5-h) of MSW were evaluated as a supplement in fish feed and determined the effect on growth performance and the antioxidant status of Nile tilapia, O.niloticus, invivo. The HWE 5-h contained significantly higher amounts of nutrient and -glucan than HWE 2-h (P<0.05). Four standardized invitro antioxidant assays showed that HWE 5-h was a better antioxidant agent than HWE 2-h (P<0.05). Tilapia fingerlings fed 5gkg(-1) HWE supplemented feed produced better (P<0.05) growth and higher antioxidant enzyme activities than 10gkg(-1) HWE, CD and BD. Thus, HWE of MSW included at 5gkg(-1) may be beneficial to tilapia farming and may also provide a way of disposing the waste created by mushroom farming.

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