Dietary Protein Hydrolysate From Calanus finmarchicus Reduces Oxidative Stress and Increases Intestinal Health in European Sea Bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) Juveniles
Isak Bøgwald, Alice Marie Pedersen, Jorge Dias, Sileshi Gizachew Wubshet, Karl-Erik Eilertsen

TL;DR
A protein hydrolysate from Calanus finmarchicus improves the health of European sea bass juveniles by reducing oxidative stress and boosting intestinal health.
Contribution
This study introduces Calanus finmarchicus hydrolysate as a novel, sustainable feed ingredient with health benefits for farmed fish.
Findings
Calanus hydrolysate reduced hepatic protein carbonyls and calprotectin levels in sea bass.
Calanus hydrolysate increased mucin levels, indicating improved intestinal health.
The hydrolysate showed potential to reduce reliance on traditional fishmeal sources.
Abstract
The aquaculture industry is in dire need of novel feed ingredients that can improve the health and welfare of farmed fish and shrimp. Zooplankton are natural and underutilized marine resources with the potential to be part of a nutritional solution. The aim of this study was to determine the health effects for European sea bass juveniles fed diets with a protein hydrolysate from the zooplankton species Calanus finmarchicus, a novel raw material for feed ingredients. Calanus hydrolysate (CH) was benchmarked using fish hydrolysates as controls at inclusion rates of 3%–4%, depending on the protein content for each of the hydrolysates to allow equivalent protein levels in the diets. The initial feeding trial was 84 days, with an additional week to perform an inflammatory challenge with a UV-inactivated bacterium. Fish receiving diets with CH inclusion were associated with lower levels of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAquaculture Nutrition and Growth · Protein Hydrolysis and Bioactive Peptides · Aquaculture disease management and microbiota
