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The Application of Synthetic Flavors in Zebrafish (Danio rerio) Rearing with Emphasis on Attractive Ones: Effects on Fish Development, Welfare, and Appetite

Animals 2023 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Nico Cattaneo, Nico Cattaneo, Federico Conti, Tyrone Lucon‐Xiccato, Matteo Zarantoniello Nico Cattaneo, Giulia Secci, Giulia Secci, Matteo Zarantoniello Matteo Zarantoniello Matteo Zarantoniello Matteo Zarantoniello Matteo Zarantoniello Nico Cattaneo, Nico Cattaneo, Federico Conti, Nico Cattaneo, Matteo Antonucci, Matteo Zarantoniello Federico Conti, Matteo Zarantoniello Matteo Zarantoniello Nico Cattaneo, Federico Conti, Tyrone Lucon‐Xiccato, Federico Conti, Mirko Rattin, Gaia De Russi, Ike Olivotto, Giulia Secci, Ike Olivotto, Tyrone Lucon‐Xiccato, Ike Olivotto, Ike Olivotto, Tyrone Lucon‐Xiccato, Ike Olivotto, Ike Olivotto, Adja Cristina Lira de Medeiros, Ike Olivotto, Ike Olivotto, Ike Olivotto, Matteo Zarantoniello

Summary

Researchers tested synthetic flavors as potential feed attractants for zebrafish during early development and evaluated their effects on growth, welfare, and appetite. They found that certain cheese-like and vanilla-like flavors dissolved in propylene glycol influenced feeding behavior and development to varying degrees. The study explores novel approaches to improving aquaculture feed efficiency through flavor-based attractants.

Body Systems

The aim of the present study was to test synthetic flavors as potential feed attractants in zebrafish (<i>Danio rerio</i>) during early development. Six experimental groups were set up in triplicate: (i) a CTRL group fed a zebrafish commercial diet; (ii) a PG group fed a control diet added with Propylene Glycol (PG); (iii) A1<sup>+</sup> and A2<sup>+</sup> groups fed a control diet added with 1% of the two attractive flavors (A1<sup>+</sup> cheese odor made by mixing Propylene Glycol (PG) with the aromatic chemicals trimethyamine, 2-acetylpyrazine, 2-acetylpyridine, and dimethyl sulfide; and A2<sup>+</sup> caramel odor, made of PG mixed with the aromatic chemicals vanillin, maltol, cyclotene, acetoin, butyric acid, and capric acid with traces of both gamma-octalactone and gamma-esalactone) or the repulsive flavor (A<sup>-</sup> coconut odor, made by mixing PG with the aromatic chemicals gamma-eptalactone, gamma-nonalactone, delta-esalactone, and vanillin with trace of both delta-octalactone and maltol), respectively; (iv) an ROT group fed the two attractive diets, each administered singularly in a weekly rotation scheme. All the tested synthetic flavors did not affect the overall health of larval and juvenile fish and promoted growth. Due to the longer exposure time, results obtained from the juvenile stage provided a clearer picture of the fish responses: zebrafish fed both attractive diets showed higher appetite stimulus, feed ingestion, and growth, while the brain dopaminergic activity suggested the A2<sup>+</sup> diet as the most valuable solution for its long-lasting effect over the whole experiment (60-day feeding trial, from larvae to adults). The present study provided important results about the possible use of attractive synthetic flavors for aquafeed production, opening new sustainable and more economically valuable opportunities for the aquaculture sector.

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