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Title: | Autochthonous probiotic Lactobacillus sp. in the diet of bullfrog tadpoles Lithobates catesbeianus improves weight gain, feed conversion and gut microbiota |
Authors: | Pereira, Scheila Anelise Jerônimo, Gabriela Tomas Costa Marchiori, Natália da Oliveira, Hugo Mendes de Owatari, Marco Shizuo Jesus, G. F.A. Garcia, Patrícia Vieira, Felipe do Nascimento Martins, Maurício Laterça Mouriño, José Luiz Pedreira |
Issue Date: | 2017 |
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: | Aquaculture Nutrition |
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: | Volume 23, Número 5, Pags. 910-916 |
Abstract: | Dietary supplementation with probiotics in animal production is an alternative to antibiotics. In frog culture, studies involving native strains of probiotic bacteria and their effects on the performance and intestinal histology of farmed animals are scarce. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate a diet supplemented with Lactobacillus sp. in tadpoles of Lithobates catesbeianus. This randomized test was performed with two dietary treatments: non-supplemented control diet and diet supplemented with Lactobacillus sp., with nine replications. The growth performance of Lactobacillus sp., including its bacterial enzymatic activity and stability in feed, as well as colonization and histology of the intestinal tract, was evaluated after 42 days of experimentation. Animals fed with a supplemented diet showed higher weight gain and concentration of lactic acid bacteria in the gut and lower feed conversion. No significant difference was observed in survival, total heterotrophic bacterial count or histological change in the gut between the two treatments. The Lactobacillus sp. strain was able to colonize the intestinal tract and feed and remain at a high concentration of 107 and 106 CFU g−1, respectively. It produced several enzymes, which might have contributed to the greater weight gain and lower feed conversion in the supplemented animals, thus demonstrating its probiotic potential for use as a dietary supplement in bullfrog tadpoles. © 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd |
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: | 10.1111/anu.12458 |
Appears in Collections: | Artigos |
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