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Wiley InterScience

Fisheries Science

Fisheries Science

Volume 73 Issue 1, Pages 63 - 69

Published Online: 1 Feb 2007

© 2008 Japanese Society of Fisheries Science



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Dietary medicinal herbs improve growth and some non-specific immunity of red sea bream Pagrus major
Seung-Cheol JI, 1 * Osamu TAKAOKA, 1 Gwan-Sik JEONG, 2 Si-Woo LEE, 2 Katsuya ISHIMARU, 3 Manabu SEOKA 1 AND Kenji TAKII 1
  1 Fisheries Laboratory, Kinki University, Uragami, Wakayama 649-5145, Japan,   2 College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, Chonnam National University, Yeosu 550-749, Korea, and   3 Fisheries Laboratory, Kinki University, Shirahama, Wakayama 649-22, Japan
Correspondence to   *Tel: 81-7-3558-0116. Fax: 81-7-3558-1246. Email: ns_ji@nara.kindai.ac.jp
Copyright 2007 Blackwell Science Asia Pty Ltd
KEYWORDS
growth performance • medicinal herbs • non-specific immunity • red sea bream

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT:  The effects of dietary medicinal herbs on growth and some non-specific immunity were investigated in juvenile red sea bream Pagrus major. The fish (mean body weight 24.0 ± 0.2 g) were fed fishmeal diets supplemented with either Massa medicata (Mm), Crataegi fructus (Cf), Artemisia capillaries (Ac), Cnidium officinale (Co), or a mixture of all the herbs (HM), and a control diet without medicinal herbs, for 12 weeks. Survival, specific growth rate, feed efficiency, condition factor and hemoglobin levels were higher in fish given herbal diets than fish given the control diet without herbs. Significantly higher serum high density lipoprotein-cholesterol level and lysozyme activity were detected in HM and Co diet groups, and alternative complement pathway activity was detected in the HM diet group. However, significantly lower serum alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase activities were obtained in all herbal diet groups compared with the control diet group. Pathogen challenge test by intraperitoneal injection of Vibrio anguillarum indicated that highest survival was obtained in the HM diet group followed by Ac, Co, Cf, and Mm diet groups. The lowest survival was obtained in the control group. These results reveal that medicinal herbs in diets enhance growth and some non-specific immunity of red sea bream.


Received 22 March 2006. Accepted 10 August 2006.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1444-2906.2007.01302.x About DOI

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