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Food digestibility and water requirements in the Djungarian hamster Phodopus sungorus
1985
Schierwater, B. (Technische Univ. Braunschweig (Germany, F.R.). Zoologisches Inst.) | Klingel, H.
Fuer ein definiertes Mischfutter wurden Verdaulichkeitskoeffizienten von 90.6 % fuer Trockensubstanz, von 91.2 % Kohlenstoff, von 80.2 % fuer Rohprotein und von 91.9 % fuer Energie ermittelt. Diese Werte lagen im Vergleich zu anderen Vertretrn der Maeuseartigen sehr hoch. Bei reduzierter Wasserzufuhr verringerten die Tiere in 3 Mon. ihr Koerpergewicht um 50 % und ihren rel. Fettgehalt um mehr als 50 %. Innerhalb von 3 Wo. Rekonvaleszenz wurden aber die urspruenglichen Werte ueberreicht.
Show more [+] Less [-]Water analysis. Determination of fats in waste waters from food processing industries. Gravimetric method
1994
Rice-shrimp ecosystems in the Mekong Delta: Linking water quality, shrimp and their natural food sources Full text
2020
Leigh, Catherine | Stewart-Koster, Ben | Sang, Nguyen Van | Truc, Le Van | Hiep, Le Huu | Xoan, Vo Bich | Tinh, Nguyen Thi Ngoc | An, La Thuy | Sammut, Jesmond | Burford, Michele A.
Aquatic ecosystems are used for extensive rice-shrimp culture where the available water alternates seasonally between fresh and saline. Poor water quality has been implicated as a risk factor for shrimp survival; however, links between shrimp, water quality and their main food source, the natural aquatic biota inhabiting these ponds, are less well understood. We examined the aquatic biota and water quality of three ponds over an entire year in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam, where the growing season for the marine shrimp Penaeus monodon has been extended into the wet season, when waters freshen. The survival (30–41%) and total areal biomass (350–531 kg ha⁻¹) of shrimp was constrained by poor water quality, with water temperatures, salinity and dissolved oxygen concentrations falling outside known optimal ranges for several weeks. Declines in dissolved oxygen concentration were matched by declines in both shrimp growth rates and lipid content, the latter being indicative of nutritional condition. Furthermore, as the dry season transitioned into the wet, shifts in the taxonomic composition of phytoplankton and zooplankton were accompanied by declines in the biomass of benthic algae, an important basal food source in these systems. Densities of the benthic invertebrates directly consumed by shrimp also varied substantially throughout the year. Overall, our findings suggest that the survival, condition and growth of shrimp in extensive rice-shrimp ecosystems will be constrained when poor water quality and alternating high and low salinity negatively affect the physiology, growth and composition of the natural aquatic biota. Changes in management practices, such as restricting shrimp inhabiting ponds to the dry season, may help to address these issues and improve the sustainable productivity and overall condition of these important aquatic ecosystems.
Show more [+] Less [-]Microalgae fortification of low-fat oil-in-water food emulsions: an evaluation of the physicochemical and rheological properties Full text
2021
Uribe-Wandurraga, Zaida Natalia | Martínez-Sánchez, Irene | Savall, Carmen | García Segovia, Purificación | Martínez Monzó, Javier
Reducing the fat content in emulsions can give additional nutritional health benefits. Hence, developing low-fat oil-in-water emulsions, fortified with healthy microalgae providing advantageous properties, is an interesting topic. In this study, the addition of Arthrospira platensis (Spirulina), Chlorella vulgaris (Chlorella), and Dunaliella salina (Dunaliella) microalgae biomass on the physicochemical properties of low-fat oil-in-water emulsion formulations were evaluated. The rheological properties of food emulsions were measured in terms of the viscoelastic, flow behaviour, and textural properties, with all properties studied during 60 days. pH values of all the emulsions ranged between 3.0 and 3.7 and agreed to the Codex Alimentarius Commission. Moreover, their rheological behaviour may be classified as weak gel-like, a distinguishing characteristic of low-fat emulsion products. Substantial differences in rheological properties were observed between the fortified microalgae emulsions over the storage time (60 days). However, incorporating Spirulina or Dunaliella gave emulsions with stable texture, viscoelastic, and rheological properties. The prepared emulsions displayed good colour stability for Chlorella and Dunaliella. Overall, the fortified microalgae low-fat emulsions are expected to provide a blueprint for the design of low-fat mayonnaise-like food emulsions.
Show more [+] Less [-]Moisture migration in a cereal composite food at high water activity: Effects of initial porosity and fat content
2006
Roca, E. | Guillard, V. | Guibert, S. | Gontard, N.
Water sorption isotherms and effective moisture diffusivities were determined at 20 degrees C for sponge cakes at high water activity as a function of their initial porosity, in the range 86 and 52% (0 g/g dry basis fat content), and of their fat content, ranging between 0 and 0.30 g/g dry basis (67% initial porosity). The equilibrium moisture values were not affected by food structure and decreased with increasing fat content. The effective moisture diffusivity decreased from 7.5 to 0.3 X 10(-10) m2/s with increasing moisture content from 0.30 to 2.20 g/g dry basis. Decreasing initial porosity from 86 to 52% decreased effective moisture diffusivity by more than four orders of magnitude. This behaviour was related to differences of water transfer mechanisms, with the contribution from liquid water diffusion in the solid matrix and from vapour water diffusion in pores. Increasing fat content of 0.30 g/g dry basis in sponge cake, independently of porosity, decreased effective moisture diffusivity by more than five orders of magnitude. A predictive mathematical model was used to simulate moisture intake in two-composite food systems: sponge cakes with varying initial porosities and fat contents and an agar gel as a model of a non-rate limiting water source. Increasing the density of the structure or addition of fat in the cereal-based phase could increase shelf life of composite foods.
Show more [+] Less [-]Recycling Food Waste and Saving Water: Optimization of the Fermentation Processes from Cheese Whey Permeate to Yeast Oil Full text
2022
Donzella, Silvia | Fumagalli, Andrea | Arioli, Stefania | Pellegrino, Luisa | D’Incecco, Paolo | Molinari, Francesco | Speranza, Giovanna | Ubiali, Daniela | Robescu, Marina S. | Compagno, Concetta
With the aim of developing bioprocesses for waste valorization and a reduced water footprint, we optimized a two-step fermentation process that employs the oleaginous yeast Cutaneotrichosporon oleaginosus for the production of oil from liquid cheese whey permeate. For the first step, the addition of urea as a cost-effective nitrogen source allowed an increase in yeast biomass production. In the second step, a syrup from candied fruit processing, another food waste supplied as carbon feeding, triggered lipid accumulation. Consequently, yeast lipids were produced at a final concentration and productivity of 38 g/L and 0.57 g/L/h respectively, which are among the highest reported values. Through this strategy, based on the valorization of liquid food wastes (WP and mango syrup) and by recovering not only nutritional compounds but also the water necessary for yeast growth and lipid production, we addressed one of the main goals of the circular economy. In addition, we set up an accurate and fast-flow cytometer method to quantify the lipid content, avoiding the extraction step and the use of solvents. This can represent an analytical improvement to screening lipids in different yeast strains and to monitoring the process at the single-cell level.
Show more [+] Less [-]Correlation of foodstuffs with ethanol–water mixtures with regard to the solubility of migrants from food contact materials Full text
2014
Seiler, Annika | Bach, Aurélie | Driffield, M. (Malcolm) | Paseiro Losada, Perfecto | Mercea, Peter | Tosa, Valer | Franz, Roland
Today most foods are available in a packed form. During storage, the migration of chemical substances from food packaging materials into food may occur and may therefore be a potential source of consumer exposure. To protect the consumer, standard migration tests are laid down in Regulation (EU) No. 10/2011. When using those migration tests and applying additional conservative conventions, estimated exposure is linked with large uncertainties including a certain margin of safety. Thus the research project FACET was initiated within the 7th Framework Programme of the European Commission with the aim of developing a probabilistic migration modelling framework which allows one (1) to calculate migration into foods under real conditions of use; and (2) to deliver realistic concentration estimates for consumer exposure modelling for complex packaging materials (including multi-material multilayer structures). The aim was to carry out within the framework of the FACET project a comprehensive systematic study on the solubility behaviour of foodstuffs for potentially migrating organic chemicals. Therefore a rapid and convenient method was established to obtain partition coefficients between polymer and food, K P/F. With this method approximately 700 time-dependent kinetic experiments from spiked polyethylene films were performed using model migrants, foods and ethanol–water mixtures. The partition coefficients of migrants between polymer and food (K P/F) were compared with those obtained using ethanol–water mixtures (K P/F’s) to investigate whether an allocation of food groups with common migration behaviour to certain ethanol–water mixtures could be made. These studies have confirmed that the solubility of a migrant is mainly dependent on the fat content in the food and on the ethanol concentration of ethanol–water mixtures. Therefore dissolution properties of generic food groups for migrants can be assigned to those of ethanol–water mixtures. All foodstuffs (including dry foods) when allocated to FACET model food group codes can be classified into a reduced number of food categories each represented by a corresponding ethanol–water equivalency.
Show more [+] Less [-]Comparison of Nitrofen Uptake via Water and Food and its Distribution in Tissue of Common Carp, Cyprinus carpio L Full text
2011
Inoue, Yoshiyuki | Hashizume, Naoki | Kikushima, Erina | Otsuka, Masanori
Carp (Cyprinus carpio L.) were exposed to nitrofen (NIP) by different routes (via water or food) to compare bioaccumulation parameters and tissue distribution. The bioconcentration factor of NIP was 5,100, and the lipid-corrected biomagnification factor was 0.137. Growth-corrected elimination half lives were 2.1–3.0 days via aqueous exposure and 2.7–2.9 days via dietary exposure. From either uptake route, the tissue distribution of NIP was highest in the head, followed by muscle, viscera, dermis, digestive tract and hepatopancreas, which was highly correlated with the tissue lipid content. We conclude that the uptake route has no influence on tissue distribution of NIP and that the accumulation potential in tissues depends on the lipid content.
Show more [+] Less [-]Sensitive detection of Escherichia coli O157:H7 in food and water by immunomagnetic separation and solid-phase laser cytometry
1999
Pyle, B.H. | Broadaway, S.C. | McFeters, G.A.
Rapid, direct methods are needed to assess active bacterial populations in water and foods. Our objective was to determine the efficiency of bacterial detection by immunomagnetic separation (IMS) and the compatibility of IMS with cyanoditolyl tetrazolium chloride (CTC) incubation to determine respiratory activity, using the pathogen Escherichia coli O157:H7. Counterstaining with a specific fluorescein-conjugated anti-O157 antibody (FAb) following CTC incubation was used to allow confirmation and visualization of bacteria by epifluorescence microscopy. Broth-grown E. coli O157:H7 was used to inoculate fresh ground beef (<17% fat), sterile 0.1% peptone, or water. Inoculated meat was diluted and homogenized in a stomacher and then incubated with paramagnetic beads coated with anti-O157 specific antibody. After IMS, cells with magnetic beads attached were stained with CTC and then an anti-O157 antibody-fluorescein isothiocyanate conjugate and filtered for microscopic enumeration or solid-phase laser cytometry. Enumeration by laser scanning permitted detection of ca. 10 CFU/g of ground beef or <10 CFU/ml of liquid sample. With inoculated meat, the regression results for log-transformed respiring FAb-positive counts of cells recovered on beads versus sorbitol-negative plate counts in the inoculum were as follows: intercept = 1.06, slope = 0.89, and r2 = 0.95 (n = 13). The corresponding results for inoculated peptone were as follows: intercept = 0.67, slope = 0.88, and r2 = 0.98 (n = 24). Recovery of target bacteria on beads by the IMS-CTC-FAb method, compared with recovery by sorbitol MacConkey agar plating, yielded greater numbers (beef, 6.0 times; peptone, 3.0 times; water, 2.4 times). Thus, within 5 to 7 h, the IMS-CTC-FAb method detected greater numbers of E. coli O157 cells than were detected by plating. The results show that the IMS-CTC-FAb technique with enumeration by either fluorescence microscopy or solid-phase laser scanning cytometry gave results that compared favorably with plating following IMS.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of different dietary lipid levels in extruded food on the growth of 1+-old carp (Cyprinus carpio) cultured in cooling water
1998
Filipiak, J. | Przybyl, A. | Sadowski, J. | Plust, M. | Trzebiatowski, R.
Carp of the initial individual weight about 1 kg were fed in cages with four kinds of extruded feeds differing in the lipid content (7.5-19.5 percentage). The main source of lipids was a poultry fat. The most favourable results of rearing were achieved while feed containing 15.3 percentage of lipids was used in carp feeding
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