Redesigning Aquafeeds: Insect, Algae, and By-Product Blends Sustain Growth and Nutritional Value in European Sea Bass Under Feeding Constraints
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Author
Publication date
2026-01-23ISSN
2410-3888
Abstract
Adopting novel feed ingredients and aligning feeding strategies with these
formulations are key to improving aquaculture sustainability. This study assessed the
combined effects of alternative protein and lipid sources and feeding regime on growth,
nutrient utilization, and body composition of European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax)
juveniles. Methods: Two isoenergetic and identical digestible protein diets (39%) were
formulated: a control (conventional fishmeal/fish oil (FM/FO) and plant proteins,
containing 20% FM and 6% FO) and an alternative diet replacing 50% of FM and 25% of
vegetable proteins with a blend of poultry by-products, insect meal, and single-cell
protein (Corynebacterium glutamicum) and totally replacing fish oil with alternative lipid
sources (microalgae and by-product oils). Fish (28 g of initial body weight) were fed for
210 days either to apparent satiety (AS) or under moderate restriction (85% and 65% of
AS). The number of fish used was 65 fish per 500 L tank (triplicate for each experimental
group). Growth performance, feed conversion, nutrient efficiency ratios, protein
retention, and proximate and fatty acid composition were measured. Results: The
alternative diet significantly improved growth, feed and nutrient efficiency, and protein
retention compared with the control. Whole-body fatty acid profiles of fish fed the
alternative diet showed higher contents of nutritionally important fatty acids, including
DHA. Restricted feeding at 65% of AS enhanced nutrient efficiency ratios and protein
retention relative to 85% and AS, but reduced growth. Feeding to AS produced the highest
feed intake and growth but poorer feed conversion and nutrient efficiency. No significant
interaction between diet and feeding strategy was observed. Conclusions: Incorporating
novel protein and lipid sources can improve sea bass performance and product nutritional
value while supporting sustainability. Feeding at ~85% of AS may offer a practical
compromise between growth and efficient nutrient utilization.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
63 - Agriculture and related sciences and techniques
Pages
19
Publisher
MDPI
Is part of
Fishes
Grant agreement number
EC/H2020/818367/EU/Genomic and nutritional innovations for genetically superior farmed fish to improve efficiency in European aquaculture/AquaIMPACT
Program
Aqüicultura
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This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [3561]
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/


