Production of European eel offspring has become a reality, but liquid diets during larval culture hold new challenges. This study focused on increasing food amounts without compromising well-being or healthy larvae-bacteria interactions. First-feeding larvae were fed two food amounts (Low = 0.5 mL food/L water vs. High = 1.5 mL food/L water) until 30 days post-hatch (dph). Results indicated that ~75% of larvae ingested the diet in both treatments, but upregulation of a stress/repairrelated gene (hsp90) on 25 and 30 dph indicated nutritional inadequacy. Larvae fed a High amount of food were 3.68% bigger, while larvae in the Low-food group showed 45.2% lower gut fullness and upregulated expression of the gene encoding the “hunger hormone” ghrelin (ghrl), indicating signs of starvation. The High-food group larvae exhibited a healthier bacteriome with a higher abundance of potentially beneficial orders (Lactobacillales and Bacillales), whereas the Low-food group showed more potentially harmful orders (Vibrionales, Rhodobacterales, and Alteromonadales). While survival was initially lower in the High-food group, both treatments had comparable survival by the end of the experiment. In conclusion, feeding European eel larvae with High food amounts seemed beneficial, supported by increased gut fullness, reduced ghrl expression (no starvation), enhanced growth, and the presence of a healthier bacteriome.

Effect of food amounts on larval performance, bacteriome and molecular immunologic development during first-feeding culture of European eel / Kasun Anuruddha Bandara, Sebastian Nikitas Politis *, Sune Riis Sørensen, Elisa Benini, Jonna Tomkiewicz, Olav Vadstein. - In: MICROORGANISMS. - ISSN 2076-2607. - ELETTRONICO. - 12:2(2024), pp. 355.1-355.24. [10.3390/microorganisms12020355]

Effect of food amounts on larval performance, bacteriome and molecular immunologic development during first-feeding culture of European eel

Elisa Benini;
2024

Abstract

Production of European eel offspring has become a reality, but liquid diets during larval culture hold new challenges. This study focused on increasing food amounts without compromising well-being or healthy larvae-bacteria interactions. First-feeding larvae were fed two food amounts (Low = 0.5 mL food/L water vs. High = 1.5 mL food/L water) until 30 days post-hatch (dph). Results indicated that ~75% of larvae ingested the diet in both treatments, but upregulation of a stress/repairrelated gene (hsp90) on 25 and 30 dph indicated nutritional inadequacy. Larvae fed a High amount of food were 3.68% bigger, while larvae in the Low-food group showed 45.2% lower gut fullness and upregulated expression of the gene encoding the “hunger hormone” ghrelin (ghrl), indicating signs of starvation. The High-food group larvae exhibited a healthier bacteriome with a higher abundance of potentially beneficial orders (Lactobacillales and Bacillales), whereas the Low-food group showed more potentially harmful orders (Vibrionales, Rhodobacterales, and Alteromonadales). While survival was initially lower in the High-food group, both treatments had comparable survival by the end of the experiment. In conclusion, feeding European eel larvae with High food amounts seemed beneficial, supported by increased gut fullness, reduced ghrl expression (no starvation), enhanced growth, and the presence of a healthier bacteriome.
2024
Effect of food amounts on larval performance, bacteriome and molecular immunologic development during first-feeding culture of European eel / Kasun Anuruddha Bandara, Sebastian Nikitas Politis *, Sune Riis Sørensen, Elisa Benini, Jonna Tomkiewicz, Olav Vadstein. - In: MICROORGANISMS. - ISSN 2076-2607. - ELETTRONICO. - 12:2(2024), pp. 355.1-355.24. [10.3390/microorganisms12020355]
Kasun Anuruddha Bandara, Sebastian Nikitas Politis *, Sune Riis Sørensen, Elisa Benini, Jonna Tomkiewicz, Olav Vadstein
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/962365
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