Tese
Detoxificação de farelos de crambe e tungue e avaliação na resposta nutricional do jundiá (Rhamdia quelen)
Fecha
2013-02-19Registro en:
PRETTO, Alexandra. Detoxification of crambe and tung meal and assessment in the nutritional response of silver Catfish (Rhamdia quelen). 2013. 175 f. Tese (Doutorado em Zootecnia) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2013.
Autor
Pretto, Alexandra
Institución
Resumen
The vegetable meals are pointed out as the main alternative sources of the protein with
widespread availability, low cost and nutritional potential to replace the fish meal in aquaculture diets.
However, they have lower protein content, higher fiber and antinutrients, requiring a thorough study
for broad and secure applicability. Processing techniques or pretreatment may extract and/or inactivate
antinutrients improving the nutritional value of the sources. In this sense, we measured nutrients and
antinutrients and dynamics of in vitro protein digestibility of tung and crambe meal in nature and after
chemical treatment in acid-alcohol solution. This procedure reduced the levels of fat, calcium,
phosphorus, condensed tannins and phytic acid in tung meal, increased neutral detergent fiber and did
not change crude protein, ash, phenolic compounds, total and hydrolysable tannins. For crambe meal
the treatment increased the fiber and ash contents and reduced crude protein, fat, calcium, phosphorus,
total phenols, tannins (total, hydrolysable and condensed) and phytic acid. However, there was no
effect of chemical treatment on the in vitro protein digestibility of the meals. The crambe or tung
meals were also pretreated with exogenous microbial enzymes, non-commercial phytase (phytase and
tannase action 1400 U and 1100 U/Kg) and commercial phytase (Natuphos/BASF, 1400 U/Kg). The
commercial phytase showed higher efficiency on the tung meal, reducing phytic acid concentration
and non-commercial phytase acted more effectively on the tannins in crambe meal. The replacement
of fish meal and meat and bone meal by in natura crambe or tung meal (integral form) or chemically
or enzymatically detoxified in feeding of silver catfish (Rhamdia quelen) was evaluated for nine
weeks, with the study of growth, digestive parameters, metabolic and body nutrient deposition.
Growth response similar to the control was observed since the beginning of the study in animals fed
with crambe meal in the integral or chemically detoxified forms. These animals showed minimal
enzymatic and metabolical changes. The inclusion of integral tung meal or chemically detoxified
caused slower growth of animals. In the diet containing the integral form of meal, these results were
observed until the end of the experimental period and were summed the lower digestive enzymatic and
metabolic changes and lower survival of the animals. Tung meal chemically treated caused greater
growth compared to the integral form, possibly due to removal of antinutrients and toxic substances.
The inclusion of vegetable meals (both forms of enzymatically treatment) reduced fish growth since
the first evaluation, but the response was more pronounced in animals that received tung meal. The
increase in the digestivosomático index and intestinal quotient can demonstrate a physiological
adaptation of these animals to the consumption of diets with tung meal, which showed the highest
fiber content. With regard to body composition, ash, crude protein and phosphorus were not changed
between treatments containing vegetable meals under study, but treatments with inclusion of tung
meal provided lower dry matter and fat content in animals.