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| Formato: | Artículo científico |
| Lenguaje: | en |
| Publicado: |
Scientific reports
2025
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| Materias: | |
| Acceso en línea: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40593992/ |
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| _version_ | 1868266184086913024 |
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| author | Hassan, Habib Ul Ali, Amjad Al Sulivany, Basim S A Bilal, Muhammad Kanwal, Roohi Raza, Muhammad Ahsan Arslan, Abdul Ijaz, Meer Zeeshan Kabir, Muhammad Khan, Mohammad Rizwan Rasdi, Nadiah Wan Arai, Takaomi |
| author_facet | Hassan, Habib Ul Ali, Amjad Al Sulivany, Basim S A Bilal, Muhammad Kanwal, Roohi Raza, Muhammad Ahsan Arslan, Abdul Ijaz, Meer Zeeshan Kabir, Muhammad Khan, Mohammad Rizwan Rasdi, Nadiah Wan Arai, Takaomi Hassan, Habib Ul Ali, Amjad Al Sulivany, Basim S A Bilal, Muhammad Kanwal, Roohi Raza, Muhammad Ahsan Arslan, Abdul Ijaz, Meer Zeeshan Kabir, Muhammad Khan, Mohammad Rizwan Rasdi, Nadiah Wan Arai, Takaomi |
| collection | PubMed - marine biology |
| contents | Investigation of the effects of phytogenic dietary additives on growth performance, nutrient utilization, economic efficiency and health of Pangasius hypophthalmus : implications for sustainable aquaculture development. Hassan, Habib Ul Ali, Amjad Al Sulivany, Basim S A Bilal, Muhammad Kanwal, Roohi Raza, Muhammad Ahsan Arslan, Abdul Ijaz, Meer Zeeshan Kabir, Muhammad Khan, Mohammad Rizwan Rasdi, Nadiah Wan Arai, Takaomi Animals Aquaculture Animal Feed Dietary Supplements Plant Extracts Nutrients Fishes Plants, Medicinal Medicinal plants exhibit promising potential for the current needs in aquaculture production which is expected to grow in coming decades to feed a growing population and lead the blue revolution. Medicinal plants are a substitute for phytotherapy in treating fish disease outbreaks and enhance biological and growth performance providing a sustainable alternative to antibiotics and chemicals. A seventy-day trial investigated the active components of herbal extracts in improving fish health, survival, and growth of Thai pangus. Five diets were designed: T1 (Turmeric, 5%), T2 (Garlic, 5%), T3 (aloe vera, 5%), T4 (Mixed, 5%), and a control diet (T5). The fish were fed 30% dietary protein to apparent satiation four times per day. Two thousand individuals were stocked in each tank, with two replicates for each treatment, and an average body weight of 0.2 ± 0.04 g. The physicochemical parameters of tank water remained within the optimum range. The highest final body weight (42.22 ± 0.56), weight gain (42.01 ± 0.82), specific growth rate (7.57 ± 0.02), survival rate (100%) and overall health was observed in T4 with (Mixed, 5%), extract, which was significantly different from the other treatments (p |
| format | Artículo científico |
| id | pubmed_40593992 |
| institution | PubMed |
| language | en |
| publishDate | 2025 |
| publisher | Scientific reports |
| record_format | pubmed |
| spellingShingle | Investigation of the effects of phytogenic dietary additives on growth performance, nutrient utilization, economic efficiency and health of Pangasius hypophthalmus : implications for sustainable aquaculture development. Hassan, Habib Ul Ali, Amjad Al Sulivany, Basim S A Bilal, Muhammad Kanwal, Roohi Raza, Muhammad Ahsan Arslan, Abdul Ijaz, Meer Zeeshan Kabir, Muhammad Khan, Mohammad Rizwan Rasdi, Nadiah Wan Arai, Takaomi Animals Aquaculture Animal Feed Dietary Supplements Plant Extracts Nutrients Fishes Plants, Medicinal Investigation of the effects of phytogenic dietary additives on growth performance, nutrient utilization, economic efficiency and health of Pangasius hypophthalmus : implications for sustainable aquaculture development. Hassan, Habib Ul Ali, Amjad Al Sulivany, Basim S A Bilal, Muhammad Kanwal, Roohi Raza, Muhammad Ahsan Arslan, Abdul Ijaz, Meer Zeeshan Kabir, Muhammad Khan, Mohammad Rizwan Rasdi, Nadiah Wan Arai, Takaomi Animals Aquaculture Animal Feed Dietary Supplements Plant Extracts Nutrients Fishes Plants, Medicinal Medicinal plants exhibit promising potential for the current needs in aquaculture production which is expected to grow in coming decades to feed a growing population and lead the blue revolution. Medicinal plants are a substitute for phytotherapy in treating fish disease outbreaks and enhance biological and growth performance providing a sustainable alternative to antibiotics and chemicals. A seventy-day trial investigated the active components of herbal extracts in improving fish health, survival, and growth of Thai pangus. Five diets were designed: T1 (Turmeric, 5%), T2 (Garlic, 5%), T3 (aloe vera, 5%), T4 (Mixed, 5%), and a control diet (T5). The fish were fed 30% dietary protein to apparent satiation four times per day. Two thousand individuals were stocked in each tank, with two replicates for each treatment, and an average body weight of 0.2 ± 0.04 g. The physicochemical parameters of tank water remained within the optimum range. The highest final body weight (42.22 ± 0.56), weight gain (42.01 ± 0.82), specific growth rate (7.57 ± 0.02), survival rate (100%) and overall health was observed in T4 with (Mixed, 5%), extract, which was significantly different from the other treatments (p |
| title | Investigation of the effects of phytogenic dietary additives on growth performance, nutrient utilization, economic efficiency and health of Pangasius hypophthalmus : implications for sustainable aquaculture development. |
| topic | Animals Aquaculture Animal Feed Dietary Supplements Plant Extracts Nutrients Fishes Plants, Medicinal |
| url | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40593992/ |