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2 pages, 170 KB  
Abstract
Effect of Experimental Bubble and Light Barriers on Fish Attraction or Repulsion
by Miguel Vieira de Melo Neto, Eduardo Bessa Pereira da Silva, Marcos Alexandre Bolson, Ézio Sargentini Júnior and Luiz Fabrício Zara
Proceedings 2026, 146(1), 13; https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2026146013 (registering DOI) - 16 Jun 2026
Abstract
Introduction: The entry and accumulation of fish inside the suction tubes of hydroelectric power plants can pose risks to these animals. To protect ichthyofauna, repulsion systems employing diverse methodologies have been developed. Objective: The main objective of this study was to investigate the [...] Read more.
Introduction: The entry and accumulation of fish inside the suction tubes of hydroelectric power plants can pose risks to these animals. To protect ichthyofauna, repulsion systems employing diverse methodologies have been developed. Objective: The main objective of this study was to investigate the dissuasive effectiveness of a bubble and light barrier on ichthyofauna. Methodology: The experiment consisted of video recording in three stages, performed in triplicate: before activating the barrier, while the barrier was active, and after deactivating it. The movement of five juvenile Amazonian species (Cichlasoma amazonarum, Dianema urostriatum, Pimelodus blochii, Brycon spp., and Colossoma macropomum) was analyzed across the three stages by counting individuals in specific sectors every 15 s. A total of 30 specimens of each species were used, with 10 individuals allocated to each aquarium. Results: Barrier activation induced repulsion in Pimelodus blochii, Brycon spp., and Colossoma macropomum, but attraction in Cichlasoma amazonarum and Dianema urostriatum. The study reveals that the tested species respond dissimilarly to stimuli from the behavioral barrier. Conclusions: These findings address a research gap regarding native species′ responses to behavioral barriers. They underscore the importance of understanding regional ichthyofauna behavior for designing optimized bubble and light barrier systems to enhance method efficacy. The observed effectiveness highlights the potential of this robust, low-cost technology for ichthyofauna protection in hydroelectric plants. Full article
18 pages, 1633 KB  
Article
Emamectin Benzoate-Induced Gut Dysbiosis in Asian Stinging Catfish: An Integrated Culture-Dependent and 16S rRNA Gene Sequencing Approach
by Surajit Ghosh, Souvik Bag, Dibyendu Saha, Auroshree Sadhu, Triparna Roy, Susri Nayak, Soumendranath Chatterjee, Kausik Mondal, Nimai Chandra Saha, Paolo Pastorino and Shubhajit Saha
Pollutants 2026, 6(2), 30; https://doi.org/10.3390/pollutants6020030 - 11 Jun 2026
Viewed by 168
Abstract
The gut microbiota of fish plays a crucial role in nutrition, metabolism and immune regulation, and is highly sensitive to environmental stressors such as pesticide exposure. This study investigated the effects of emamectin benzoate (EMB) exposure on Asian stinging catfish (Heteropneustes fossilis [...] Read more.
The gut microbiota of fish plays a crucial role in nutrition, metabolism and immune regulation, and is highly sensitive to environmental stressors such as pesticide exposure. This study investigated the effects of emamectin benzoate (EMB) exposure on Asian stinging catfish (Heteropneustes fossilis) gut microbiota using an integrated culture-dependent and culture-independent approach to assess functional and taxonomic dysbiosis. Gut smear samples from control and EMB-treated fish at two sublethal concentrations (0.5 µg/L and 5 µg/L) were analyzed for major functional bacterial groups, including heterotrophic, lipid-hydrolysing, starch-hydrolysing, spore-forming, and Gram-negative bacteria and Pseudomonas spp., using standard plate count techniques. In parallel, microbial community composition and diversity were examined through 16S rRNA (V3–V4 region) gene amplicon sequencing followed by bioinformatic analysis. Culture-based results showed a significant decline in total heterotrophic bacteria and key functional groups in EMB-treated fish, indicating suppression of microbial metabolic activity and functional imbalance. Lipid-hydrolysing and starch-hydrolysing bacteria showed pronounced sensitivity to pesticide exposure, while spore-forming bacteria exhibited a marked reduction, suggesting compromised microbial resilience. Although Gram-negative bacteria declined overall, Pseudomonas spp. displayed a non-linear response, with an initial decrease, followed by partial recovery under higher exposure. Culture-independent analysis demonstrated reduced alpha diversity, altered community structure, and taxonomic shifts in EMB-treated fish. Pseudomonadota exhibited a distinct pattern characterized by decline at 0.5 µg/L and partial recovery at 5 µg/L, reflecting adaptive tolerance rather than restoration of microbial homeostasis. Overall, the combined evidence indicates pronounced EMB-induced gut dysbiosis at both functional and compositional levels. This study highlights the fish gut microbiome as a sensitive biomarker of stress and underscores the ecological risks associated with EMB in aquatic environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Impact Assessment of Environmental Pollution)
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22 pages, 5897 KB  
Article
Association of Selected miRNAs (hsa-miR-27b, hsa-miR-128-3p, hsa-miR-145-5p, hsa-miR-552-3p) with HER2 Status and Chromosome 17 Centromere Copy Number Increase in Gastric Cancer
by Maciej Ciesielski, Marzena Anna Lewandowska, Mariusz Szajewski, Krzysztof Pastuszak, Aleksandra Ciarka, Piotr Kurek, Jakub Walczak, Michał Stańczak, Jacek Zieliński and Wiesław Janusz Kruszewski
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(12), 5184; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27125184 - 8 Jun 2026
Viewed by 199
Abstract
Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) remains the most recognized and clinically established molecular biomarker in gastric cancer; however, the regulatory mechanisms underlying its dysregulation are not fully understood. This study aimed to identify microRNAs associated with HER2 gene amplification, chromosome 17 [...] Read more.
Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) remains the most recognized and clinically established molecular biomarker in gastric cancer; however, the regulatory mechanisms underlying its dysregulation are not fully understood. This study aimed to identify microRNAs associated with HER2 gene amplification, chromosome 17 centromere copy number increase (CNI), or alternative mechanisms driving HER2 protein overexpression. We analyzed 115 gastric cancer patients treated surgically at a single institution, with available material for immunohistochemistry (IHC), fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), and microRNA profiling. Among 11 candidate microRNAs, four demonstrated significant associations with HER2-related alterations. hsa-miR-128-3p expression was positively associated with HER2 gene amplification, while hsa-miR-145-5p expression showed an inverse relationship with centromere enumeration probe 17 (CEP17) signal count and correlated with membranous HER2 protein expression. hsa-miR-27b-5p expression was linked to CEP17 CNI, whereas hsa-miR-552-3p expression was associated with both increased HER2 amplification and CEP17 signal count. Importantly, hsa-miR-27b-5p upregulation independently predicted worse overall survival, whereas hsa-miR-128-3p upregulation independently predicted improved survival outcomes. These findings identify distinct microRNA signatures associated with HER2 pathway alterations and prognosis in gastric cancer, highlighting their potential as biomarkers and contributors to HER2-driven tumor biology. Full article
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22 pages, 6233 KB  
Article
Chitosan Edible Coating, Vacuum Packaging, and Their Synergistic Effects on the Refrigerated Shelf Life of Pangas Fish (Pangasianodon hypophthalmus) Fillets
by Jitender Kumar Jakhar, Kensina Borang, Soibam Ngasotter, Anshuman Jha, Vijay Mandavi, Rashmi Devi Salame, Garv Sarva, V. Laxmikant, Domendra Dhruve, Sanjeev Sharma, K. A. Martin Xavier, F. Tameshwar, Manoj Kumar Gendley and Sunita Jakhar
Macromol 2026, 6(2), 38; https://doi.org/10.3390/macromol6020038 - 3 Jun 2026
Viewed by 221
Abstract
Fresh fish fillets are highly perishable even under refrigerated conditions due to psychrotrophic microbial growth, enzymatic activity, and lipid oxidation. This study evaluated the individual and combined effects of chitosan edible coating and vacuum packaging on the quality and shelf life of Pangasianodon [...] Read more.
Fresh fish fillets are highly perishable even under refrigerated conditions due to psychrotrophic microbial growth, enzymatic activity, and lipid oxidation. This study evaluated the individual and combined effects of chitosan edible coating and vacuum packaging on the quality and shelf life of Pangasianodon hypophthalmus fillets stored at 4 ± 1 °C for 15 days. Four treatments were applied: uncoated aerobic (U-A), uncoated vacuum (U-V), chitosan-coated aerobic (Ch-A), and chitosan-coated vacuum (Ch-V). Quality changes were assessed through chemical, physical, microbiological, and sensory analyses. Total volatile base nitrogen (TVB-N) increased rapidly in U-A (3.5–22.4 mg N/100 g), whereas lower values were observed in Ch-V (13.3 mg N/100 g). Peroxide value (PV) increased to 1.43 meq O2/kg fat in U-A but remained lowest in Ch-V (0.77 meq O2/kg fat). Total plate count (TPC) exceeded the acceptability limit in U-A by day 15, while Ch-V remained within safe limits (6.03 log CFU/g). Coated treatments maintained more stable pH, and chitosan coating reduced moisture loss under aerobic storage. Sensory quality declined rapidly in U-A but was best preserved in Ch-V. The combined application of chitosan coating and vacuum packaging exhibited a clear synergistic effect, extending the refrigerated shelf life of fillets to at least 15 days compared with 9–12 days in uncoated samples. This approach represents an effective and eco-friendly strategy for maintaining the quality and safety of fresh fish products. Full article
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15 pages, 1454 KB  
Article
Effect of Different Antioxidants on the Quality of Smoked and Air-Dried Top Mouth Culter
by Yujie Lei, Xiaomei Gao, Wei Yu, Yu Qiao, Sha Cai and Xin Li
Foods 2026, 15(11), 1889; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods15111889 - 27 May 2026
Viewed by 236
Abstract
To improve the fish quality of air-drying topmouth culter, this study was carried out to add 0.2 wt% of antioxidants (tebutylhydroquinone (TBHQ) and tea polyphenol (TP)) in combination with salt to salinate topmouth culter and to investigate the effect of antioxidants on the [...] Read more.
To improve the fish quality of air-drying topmouth culter, this study was carried out to add 0.2 wt% of antioxidants (tebutylhydroquinone (TBHQ) and tea polyphenol (TP)) in combination with salt to salinate topmouth culter and to investigate the effect of antioxidants on the quality as well as structural characteristics of topmouth culter during air-drying at 25 °C for 24 h. The water content of the fish ranged from 63.45% to 66.01% when air-dried for 24 h. During air-drying, the water content decreased by 10%, water activity decreased, and the proportion of bound water increased slightly. The loss of water in the fish led to a dense structure and a significant increase in firmness and chewiness. The air-dried fish had reduced brightness and increased redness and yellowness. In addition, the results showed that the addition of 0.2 wt% of TP and/or TBHQ reduced the chemical spoilage of salted air-dried fish, as reflected in total volatile basic nitrogen (TVBN), thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS), and total viable count (TVC) and biogenic amine content, thus maintaining the quality of the fish meat. This study can provide a theoretical basis and value for the practical use of antioxidants in salted air-dried topmouth culter. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Food Quality and Safety)
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21 pages, 2619 KB  
Article
Stage-Specific Expression of Lens-Associated Structural Genes During Early Embryogenesis in European Seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax)
by Andreas Tsipourlianos, Nikolaos Veliotis, Rafael Angelakopoulos, Themistoklis Giannoulis and Katerina A. Moutou
Genes 2026, 17(5), 590; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes17050590 - 21 May 2026
Viewed by 306
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Lens development is an essential component of visual-system development during fish embryogenesis, yet its transcriptional timing remains poorly characterized in European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax). This study aimed to provide a stage-resolved transcriptomic characterization of lens-associated gene expression in D. labrax [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Lens development is an essential component of visual-system development during fish embryogenesis, yet its transcriptional timing remains poorly characterized in European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax). This study aimed to provide a stage-resolved transcriptomic characterization of lens-associated gene expression in D. labrax embryos and to relate these patterns to classical embryological stages. Methods: Publicly available RNA-seq data from embryos at the mid-gastrula, late somitogenesis, and hatching stages were analyzed. A targeted lens-associated gene set was defined using Gene Ontology annotations, with emphasis on genes assigned to the structural constituent of the eye lens category. Expression patterns were examined using normalized counts, variance-stabilized data, principal component analysis, and pairwise differential expression analysis. Results: Lens-associated genes displayed clear stage-dependent expression dynamics. Principal component analysis separated samples primarily by developmental stage, with the first two components explaining 89.3% of the total variance. The strongest biological shift occurred between mid-gastrula and late somitogenesis, when transcripts encoding β-crystallins and lens-fiber architecture components increased markedly. Among the most pronounced changes were the induction of crybb1l3 and cryba4, along with increased expression of membrane and cytoskeletal genes, such as the lim2 paralogs and bfsp1. By hatching, this structural-gene expression pattern was partly maintained, while specific crystallin-related loci, including crybg1a, showed further stage-associated increases. Conclusions: These findings define stage-specific patterns of lens-associated gene expression in D. labrax embryos and indicate that lens-associated structural gene expression is most pronounced during late somitogenesis among the stages analyzed. This work provides a useful reference for future studies of visual development in European seabass and for aquaculture-oriented investigations of early sensory ontogeny. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Animal Genetics and Genomics)
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23 pages, 2136 KB  
Article
Natural Dietary Supplementation with Elionurus muticus Essential Oil Enhances Growth Performance and Modulates Physiological Responses to Transport Stress in Nile Tilapia
by Aline da Silva Rocha, José Fernando Bibiano Melo, David Ramos da Rocha, Rafael Carvalho da Silva, Rafael Silva Marchão, Alane Pains Oliveira do Monte, Gabriela Cristina da Silva Santos, Samantha Chung, Leandro Licursi de Oliveira, Denise Schmidt, Rodrigo Fortes-Silva and Carlos Eduardo Copatti
Fishes 2026, 11(5), 305; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes11050305 - 20 May 2026
Viewed by 410
Abstract
This study evaluated the effects of dietary Elionurus muticus essential oil (EMEO) on growth performance, physiological responses, and resistance to car transport stress in Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus). Fish were fed experimental diets for 60 days and subsequently subjected to 6 [...] Read more.
This study evaluated the effects of dietary Elionurus muticus essential oil (EMEO) on growth performance, physiological responses, and resistance to car transport stress in Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus). Fish were fed experimental diets for 60 days and subsequently subjected to 6 h of transport stress. Five diets were tested: 0.00 (control), 0.25, 0.50, 1.00, and 1.50 mL EMEO kg−1, in triplicate (10 fish per 500 L tank; stocking density 0.4 kg L−1). Citral was the major EMEO compound (73.91%). Increasing dietary EMEO levels improved growth performance and reduced the feed conversion ratio. Before transport, EMEO supplementation increased erythrocyte counts and plasma glucose levels, while reducing hematocrit and hepatic aspartate aminotransferase (AST) activity (p < 0.05). After transport, plasma glucose, hematocrit, and hepatic AST values decreased, whereas hepatic glycogen and hemoglobin levels increased with higher EMEO inclusion (p < 0.05). Also, post-transport, EMEO-fed fish showed enhanced intestinal digestive enzyme activity (lipase and amylase) and antioxidant capacity (superoxide dismutase and ferric reducing antioxidant power) but increased protein carbonyl levels. Lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde) was reduced at intermediate EMEO levels (p < 0.05). Histological analyses indicated no tissue damage and suggested improved liver and intestinal function with increasing EMEO inclusion. Overall, dietary supplementation with 1.00 mL EMEO kg−1 is recommended to enhance growth performance and metabolic adjustment and to improve physiological status to withstand transport stress in Nile tilapia. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Tilapia Aquaculture)
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34 pages, 21357 KB  
Article
A Novel Dual-Index Analysis Method for Quantifying Fish School Feeding Intensity Using Average Swimming Speed and Feeding Aggregation Speed
by Bo Jia, Xiaochan Wang, Yinyan Shi, Jinming Zheng, Jihao Wang, Zhen Xu, Xiaolei Zhang and Chengquan Zhou
Fishes 2026, 11(5), 300; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes11050300 - 18 May 2026
Viewed by 344
Abstract
Accurate identification and quantitative assessment of fish feeding intensity are pivotal for enhancing aquaculture production efficiency. Currently, feeding intensity is mainly assessed based on fish school feeding images with a single feature, overlooking the interdependencies between individual fish and the fish school’s behavior. [...] Read more.
Accurate identification and quantitative assessment of fish feeding intensity are pivotal for enhancing aquaculture production efficiency. Currently, feeding intensity is mainly assessed based on fish school feeding images with a single feature, overlooking the interdependencies between individual fish and the fish school’s behavior. Therefore, this paper presents a method based on detecting individual fish heads to characterize the feeding aggregation speed and the average swimming speed of the fish school, thereby quantifying the fish school’s feeding intensity. First, the improved YOLOv11n-ALL model was employed to detect individual fish heads, resulting in improved detection performance, increasing inference speed, and reducing computational complexity. Additionally, feeding aggregation speed and average swimming speed indices for fish schools were constructed by combining the YOLOv11n-ALL model with the ByteTrack algorithm to track and extract the centers of individual fish heads’ detection boxes. Finally, the fish school feeding kinetic energy was assessed using the feeding aggregation speed and average swimming speed dual indices, and the fish school feeding intensity levels were classified according to the feeding kinetic energy. Experimental results reveal that the improved YOLOv11n-ALL model achieved an average detection precision (mAP50) of 94.13% for detecting fish heads, reduced the parameter count by 22.09%, and exhibited a computational complexity of 6.4 GFLOPs. Furthermore, the classification model of fish school feeding intensity, quantified by the dual indices of average swimming speed and feeding aggregation speed, achieved a detection accuracy of 97.41%. This method digitizes detection results, enabling rapid classification of fish school feeding intensity and demonstrating its effectiveness for feeding intensity assessment and the development of scientific feeding strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Computer Vision Applications for Fisheries and Aquaculture)
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17 pages, 4236 KB  
Article
MultiTask-Fish: A Shared Backbone Multitask Counting Method for Complex Fish School Scenes
by Sikun Wang, Jing-Wein Wang and Cunwei Lu
Information 2026, 17(5), 491; https://doi.org/10.3390/info17050491 - 17 May 2026
Viewed by 271
Abstract
With the growing demand for intelligent monitoring in land-based aquaculture, rapid and accurate fish counting from visual data has become important for stocking density regulation, feeding management, and production decisions. To address the challenges in above-water fish images, including scale variation, severe occlusion [...] Read more.
With the growing demand for intelligent monitoring in land-based aquaculture, rapid and accurate fish counting from visual data has become important for stocking density regulation, feeding management, and production decisions. To address the challenges in above-water fish images, including scale variation, severe occlusion and adhesion, blurred boundaries, and frequent switching between low- and high-density scenes, this study proposes MultiTask-Fish, a shared backbone multitask counting method. The network uses ResNet34 as the backbone and integrates a feature pyramid network and channel attention to learn unified feature representations. It jointly predicts detection heatmaps, foreground masks, separation boundaries, density maps, density gating, and global count regression, allowing the model to combine local localization cues, structural information, and global statistics. Based on existing polygon annotations, heatmap, mask, boundary, and density supervision are automatically generated for integrated multitask training. Experiments on 495 fish images, including 346 training and 149 validation images, showed that the proposed method achieved an MAE of 5.875, an RMSE of 11.839, and an MAPE of 0.152 on the validation set, while reducing the MAE on the high-density subset from 16.717 to 13.895. These results demonstrate its effectiveness for fish counting in complex above-water aquaculture scenes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Artificial Intelligence)
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9 pages, 4369 KB  
Case Report
Leukemic Non-Nodal Mantle Cell Lymphoma Presenting with Traumatic Splenic Rupture
by Moinul Haque, Razie Amraei and Krasimira A. Rozenova
Hematol. Rep. 2026, 18(3), 32; https://doi.org/10.3390/hematolrep18030032 - 13 May 2026
Viewed by 323
Abstract
Background: Leukemic non-nodal variant mantle cell lymphoma (nnMCL) is an uncommon subtype of mantle cell lymphoma that lacks lymphadenopathy and generally follows an indolent clinical course. Adverse genetic alterations such as TP53 inactivation and del(13q) may have prognostic significance. Clinical findings such as [...] Read more.
Background: Leukemic non-nodal variant mantle cell lymphoma (nnMCL) is an uncommon subtype of mantle cell lymphoma that lacks lymphadenopathy and generally follows an indolent clinical course. Adverse genetic alterations such as TP53 inactivation and del(13q) may have prognostic significance. Clinical findings such as splenomegaly may serve as a clue to the diagnosis and should prompt further evaluation. Case Presentation: We describe a 91-year-old woman who presented with a one-month history of anemia (hemoglobin 12.3 g/dL), mild thrombocytopenia (platelets 136 × 109/L), isolated splenomegaly and no palpable lymphadenopathy. Despite a normal total white blood cell count, intermittent relative lymphocytosis with atypical lymphocytes (4%) and smudge cells was detected on the complete blood count. Peripheral blood flow cytometry demonstrated a monoclonal kappa-restricted B-cell population negative for CD5 and CD10, comprising approximately 20% of lymphocytes. Conventional karyotyping and fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis identified del(13q), del(17p)/TP53, and IGH-CCND1 rearrangement in 8–19.5% of peripheral blood leukocytes. A month after the initial assessment, the patient presented following a fall. CT imaging of the abdomen revealed marked splenomegaly, a large subcapsular/perisplenic hematoma, and moderate-to-large hemoperitoneum. Emergent laparotomy showed an enlarged spleen (1490 g, 23 × 16 × 7.5 cm) with laceration. Histologic evaluation showed atypical lymphoid cells positive for CD20 and cyclin D1, with strong p53 expression, negative for CD5 and SOX11, and a low Ki-67 index. Similar involvement was identified in the small bowel and appendix. Targeted sequencing of splenic tissue, performed as part of a retrospective molecular characterization, identified a pathogenic TP53 variant (p.His179Gln). Conclusions: This case provides a rare opportunity to evaluate splenic and small intestinal involvement by nnMCL at both the gross and histologic levels. It highlights the importance of integrating clinical findings with flow cytometry, imaging, cytogenetic, and molecular data in establishing the diagnosis. Even when peripheral blood findings suggest a low disease burden, imaging may better define the extent of disease and support appropriate clinical assessment, particularly in elderly patients at risk for complications related to splenomegaly. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Treatment and Prognosis of Hematological Malignancies)
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13 pages, 537 KB  
Article
Improving Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) Juvenile Performance and Intestinal Condition Through Lactic Acid Bacteria Feed Fermentation
by Gustavo Alberto Arbelaez Rojas, Nataly Neves Oliveira dos Santos, Larissa Stockhausen, Bia Pacheco Kozikowski, Mariana Bender, Fernanda Regina Delzivo, Luiz Augusto Cipriani, Everton Skoronski, Pedro Toledo, German Merino Araneda and Thiago El Hadi Perez Fabregat
Animals 2026, 16(10), 1482; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16101482 - 12 May 2026
Viewed by 364
Abstract
This study evaluated the effects of feed fermented with Lactobacillus acidophilus and Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus on the growth performance and intestinal condition of the juvenile rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss. Three fermentation times (3, 6, and 9 h) were compared against a non-fermented control [...] Read more.
This study evaluated the effects of feed fermented with Lactobacillus acidophilus and Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus on the growth performance and intestinal condition of the juvenile rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss. Three fermentation times (3, 6, and 9 h) were compared against a non-fermented control diet. The experimental design followed a randomized block scheme, with four treatments and four replicates. Juvenile rainbow trout (22.2 ± 0.9 g) were distributed among 16 tanks (500 L) connected to a recirculation system at a density of 15 fish per tank. A commercial diet (45% crude protein) was fermented through solid-state fermentation. After 60 days, growth performance and intestinal condition were assessed. The microbial fermentation of extruded commercial feeds was efficient, increasing the lactic acid bacteria count and reducing pH within 6 h. Feeding fermented feeds reduced feed intake without affecting fish growth performance. Feed fermented for 3 and 6 h improved feed efficiency, and evidence of enhanced nitrogen utilization was observed. In addition, feed fermented for 6 h increased intestinal colonization by lactic acid bacteria and enhanced intestinal lipase activity. Feed fermented for 9 h showed evidence of improved intestinal condition. Overall, this study indicates that feed fermentation improves feed efficiency and intestinal condition in rainbow trout. Full article
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17 pages, 1236 KB  
Article
Synergistic Effects of Achyranthes aspera and Ricinus communis Seed Extracts with an Inactivated Vaccine Enhance Growth, Immunity, and Disease Resistance in Labeo rohita
by Aiman Nadeem, Farkhanda Asad, Asma Ashraf and Tayyaba Ali
Fishes 2026, 11(4), 239; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes11040239 - 17 Apr 2026
Viewed by 505
Abstract
Feed nutrition and rise in antibiotic resistance are growing global challenges in aquaculture, with Aeromonas hydrophila causing significant losses in the carp family. This 60-day study evaluated the potential of combining herbal seed extract (Achyranthes aspera and Ricinus communis) with inactivated [...] Read more.
Feed nutrition and rise in antibiotic resistance are growing global challenges in aquaculture, with Aeromonas hydrophila causing significant losses in the carp family. This 60-day study evaluated the potential of combining herbal seed extract (Achyranthes aspera and Ricinus communis) with inactivated vaccine (A. hydrophila) to enhance growth and immunity in Labeo rohita. A total of 540 fish were randomly assigned in six groups (T0-untreated control, T1-A. aspera seed extract (ASE), T2-R. communis seed extract (RSE), T3-vaccinated control, T4-vaccine plus ASE, T5-vaccine plus RSE). Results revealed that herbal–vaccine combinations, particularly T4, showed highest growth performance (p < 0.05). Furthermore, this group showed improved metabolic profiles, indicated by reduced serum cholesterol, triglycerides, and glucose, along with significantly elevated albumin and globulin concentrations. In terms of immune response, neutrophil counts were significantly higher in T4 and T5. Crucially, following a challenge with A. hydrophila, survival rates were higher in T4:90% and T5:85% compared with positive control’s meager 20% survival. Post-challenge hematology confirmed that groups T4 and T5 maintained an enhanced immune status. These findings suggest that combining medicinal plants extract with vaccine effectively enhances growth, immunity, and disease resistance in L. rohita, presenting an environment friendly alternative to traditional antibiotics in aquaculture. Full article
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20 pages, 1413 KB  
Article
Growth, Health, and Economic Performance of Post-Weaning Lambs Fed Alternative Concentrate
by Said Al-Khalasi, Abdullah Al-Ghafri, Fahad Al-Yahyaey, Suad Al-Saqri, Nasser Al-Habsi and Abdullahi Idris Muhammad
Animals 2026, 16(8), 1203; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16081203 - 15 Apr 2026
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 684
Abstract
The adoption of cost-effective feeding regimes is essential to maintain the growth and physiological status of lambs after weaning. The economic benefits of an alternative concentrate diet for Omani lambs were also assessed. Twenty male Omani lambs (12.31 ± 3.22 kg; 5 months [...] Read more.
The adoption of cost-effective feeding regimes is essential to maintain the growth and physiological status of lambs after weaning. The economic benefits of an alternative concentrate diet for Omani lambs were also assessed. Twenty male Omani lambs (12.31 ± 3.22 kg; 5 months old) were allocated to a commercial concentrate (control) or formulated concentrate group (n = 10/treatment) for 63 days. The formulated concentrate consisted of date palm fronds (29%), barley (20%), fish meal (12%), date syrup (10%), Moringa oleifera (28%), and salt (1%), with all ingredient proportions expressed on a dry matter (DM) basis. Growth performance, feed efficiency, hematological indices, serum biochemical parameters, and cost analyses were evaluated using individual lambs as the experimental unit. Growth performance, feed efficiency, hematological and serum biochemical parameters, and cost analyses were performed. Final body weight (BW), total weight gain (TWG), average daily gain (ADG), and feed conversion ratio (FCR) were similar between the groups (p > 0.05). The average daily feed intake was similar between groups (p = 0.321). However, the feed cost per kg of gain and feeding cost were lower (p < 0.001) by 63 and 58%, respectively, for the formulated concentrate group. Time × group interactions were observed for red blood cell parameters, with higher platelet counts (p < 0.001) and reticulocyte hemoglobin content (p = 0.018) in the formulated concentrate group. The serum biochemical parameters changed over time, with similar responses between the groups. Appropriate substitution of ingredients in lamb concentrate diets with agricultural by-products positively influenced economic efficiency. Full article
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16 pages, 6859 KB  
Article
Real-Time Detection and Counting Method for Distant-Water Tuna Based on Improved YOLOv10n-EMCNet
by Yuqing Liu, Zichen Zhang, Yuanchen Cheng, Hejun Liang, Jiacheng Wan and Chenye Wang
Sensors 2026, 26(7), 2240; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26072240 - 4 Apr 2026
Viewed by 546
Abstract
Reliable real-time detection and counting of tuna during distant-water deck operations is critical for automated catch monitoring but remains challenging due to strong illumination variation, background clutter, and frequent occlusion. This study proposes YOLOv10n-EMCNet, an improved lightweight detector based on YOLOv10n, integrating an [...] Read more.
Reliable real-time detection and counting of tuna during distant-water deck operations is critical for automated catch monitoring but remains challenging due to strong illumination variation, background clutter, and frequent occlusion. This study proposes YOLOv10n-EMCNet, an improved lightweight detector based on YOLOv10n, integrating an ESC-based C2f enhancement in the backbone, a Multi-Branch and Scale Modulation-Fusion Feature Pyramid Network (SMFPN) in the neck, and a Convolutional Attention Fusion Module (CAFM) in the head for fine-grained representation and multi-scale feature fusion. An end-to-end detection–tracking–counting pipeline is further constructed by combining the detector with DeepSORT and an ROI-based de-duplication strategy. On the tuna dataset, YOLOv10n-EMCNet achieved 94.84% mAP@0.5, 65.29% mAP@0.5:0.95, and 91.77% recall with 6.5 GFLOPs. In addition, a controlled comparison among DeepSORT, ByteTrack, and OC-SORT on challenging videos showed that DeepSORT provided the best overall balance between counting accuracy, identity stability, and runtime efficiency. In shipboard video validation on four representative videos covering daytime high glare, nighttime low light, dense occlusion, and dense multi-target, the proposed pipeline achieved an average counting accuracy of 91.4%, with an average relative error of 8.62% and an average absolute error of 1.25 fish per video, while operating at approximately 30 FPS on an RTX 4090D platform. These results provide encouraging preliminary evidence that the proposed method can support automated tuna monitoring under representative shipboard conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Digital Agriculture, Smart Farming and Crop Monitoring)
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17 pages, 470 KB  
Review
Investigation of the Impact of the Mediterranean Diet on Periodontal Health Status: A Narrative Review
by Filippos Fytros, Vasileios Zisis, Petros Papadopoulos, Thomas Chontos, Konstantinos Poulopoulos, Christina Charisi, Andreas Yiannouras, Vasiliki Arsoudi, Athanasios Poulopoulos and Smaragda Diamanti
Oral 2026, 6(2), 39; https://doi.org/10.3390/oral6020039 - 3 Apr 2026
Viewed by 851
Abstract
Background: The Mediterranean diet (MD) represents a nutritionally balanced eating pattern characterized by high consumption of fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, whole grains, olive oil, fish, and extra-virgin olive oil as the principal fat source and limited intake of red meat and refined sugars. [...] Read more.
Background: The Mediterranean diet (MD) represents a nutritionally balanced eating pattern characterized by high consumption of fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, whole grains, olive oil, fish, and extra-virgin olive oil as the principal fat source and limited intake of red meat and refined sugars. Emerging evidence indicates that the MD’s anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties extend beyond systemic health, potentially reducing the risk and severity of periodontitis. This narrative review aimed to synthesize current evidence on the relationship between adherence to the MD and periodontal health outcomes. Methods: A comprehensive electronic literature search was conducted in PubMed without restrictions on publication date. Fourteen studies, ranging from 2019 to 2025, were included, encompassing human, clinical, experimental, and review designs that examined MD adherence and its effects on periodontal parameters. Eligible studies included cross-sectional, cohort, randomized controlled trials; systematic reviews; and animal models assessing clinical periodontal indices, inflammatory biomarkers, or microbial composition. Extracted data included study design, population characteristics, dietary assessment methods, and primary periodontal findings. Results: Most studies demonstrated that greater adherence to the MD was associated with improved periodontal parameters, including reduced probing pocket depth, clinical attachment loss, and bleeding on probing. Interventional trials showed significant reductions in systemic inflammatory markers such as IL-1β, TNF-α, and CRP, along with decreased counts of periodontopathogenic bacteria. Experimental studies further revealed the protective role of oleic acid and polyphenols in regulating macrophage activity, suppressing osteoclastogenesis, and enhancing IL-10 expression via epigenetic modulation. However, heterogeneity in dietary scoring systems, sample characteristics, and follow-up duration limited direct comparison, and not all associations reached statistical significance. Conclusions: Current evidence supports a beneficial association between MD adherence and periodontal health, mediated through anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and microbiome-stabilizing mechanisms. Further standardized longitudinal and interventional studies are needed to confirm causality and refine nutritional strategies for periodontal disease prevention and management. Full article
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