Lorenzo Márquez
University of Almería
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Featured researches published by Lorenzo Márquez.
Fish Physiology and Biochemistry | 2013
R. Robles; A. B. Lozano; A. Sevilla; Lorenzo Márquez; Waldo G. Nuez-Ortín; Francisco Javier Moyano
Butyrate is a short-chain fatty acid extensively used in animal nutrition since it promotes increases in body weight and other multiple beneficial effects on the intestinal tract. Although such effects have been demonstrated in several species, very few studies have assessed them in fish. On the other hand, little is known about the metabolic processes underlying these effects. In the present work, growth parameters and changes in more than 80 intestinal metabolites (nucleotides, amino acids and derivatives, glycolytic intermediates, redox coenzymes and lipid metabolism coenzymes) have been quantified in juvenile sea bream fed a butyrate-supplemented diet. Results showed a significant increase in the weight of fish receiving butyrate, while metabolomics provided some clues on the suggested effects of this feed additive. It seems that butyrate increased the availability of several essential amino acids and nucleotide derivatives. Also, the energy provision for enteric cells might have been enhanced by a decrease in glucose and amino acid oxidation related to the use of butyrate as fuel. Additionally, butyrate might have increased transmethylation activity. This work represents an advance in the knowledge of the metabolic consequences of using butyrate as an additive in fish diets.
Helgoland Marine Research | 2013
Lorenzo Márquez; Daniel Quintana; Antonio Lorenzo; Eduardo Almansa
Captive Octopus vulgaris adults were fed three mono-diets based on pilchard, crab and squid and allowed to grow until reproduction under controlled temperature. Spawns from each dietary treatment were isolated, and the embryonic development, egg length, width and wet weight, in addition to neonate dry weight, dorsal mantle length and ventral mantle length were monitored. Pilchard-diet spawns developed faster in terms of thermal time. Initial egg wet weight was higher for squid and crab diets. Irrespective of the parental diet, eggs passed through a swelling process so that egg width and wet weight increased in a nonlinear way, whereas egg length was left nearly unaffected. Egg length and initial wet weight showed a high correlation with neonate dry weight. Egg length, even at advanced incubation, can be used as a good proxy for neonate dry weight, this fact having potential implications for the ecological and aquaculture research on O. vulgaris.
Archives of Animal Nutrition | 2016
Raquel Monge-Ortiz; Silvia Martínez-Llorens; Lorenzo Márquez; Francisco Javier Moyano; Miguel Jover-Cerdá; Ana Tomás-Vidal
ABSTRACT The effect of partial or total dietary substitution of fishmeal (FM) by vegetal protein sources on growth and feed efficiency was carried out in on-growing gilthead sea bream (mean initial weight 131 g). The Control diet (FM 100) contained FM as the primary protein source, while in Diets FM 25 and FM 0 the FM protein was replaced at 75% and 100%, respectively, by a vegetable protein mixture consisting of wheat gluten, soybean meal, rapeseed meal and crystalline amino acids. Diets FM 25 and FM 0 also contained krill meal at 47 g/kg in order to improve palatability. At the end of the trial (after 158 d), fish survival was above 90%. Final weight and the specific growth rate were statistically lower in fish fed the Control diet (361 g and 0.64%/d), compared with 390–396 g and 0.69–0.70%/d after feeding vegetal diets. No significant differences were found regarding feed intake and feed conversion ratio. The digestibility of protein and amino acids (determined with chromium oxide as indicator) was similar in all diets. The blood parameters were not significantly affected by treatments. The activity of trypsin and pepsin was significantly reduced after feeding Diet FM 0. In the distal intestine, the villi length in fish fed Diet FM 25 was significantly longer and the intestine of the fish fed the FM 100 diet showed a smaller number of goblet cells. In conclusion, a total FM substitution by a vegetal mix supplemented with synthetic amino acids in on-growing sea bream is feasible.
Animal Feed Science and Technology | 2011
Gabriel A. Morales; Francisco Javier Moyano; Lorenzo Márquez
Fish Physiology and Biochemistry | 2012
Lorenzo Márquez; Rocío Robles; Gabriel A. Morales; Francisco Javier Moyano
Aquaculture | 2015
Daniel Quintana; Lorenzo Márquez; José Ramón Arévalo; Antonio Lorenzo; Eduardo Almansa
Aquaculture Nutrition | 2014
Gabriel A. Morales; Lorenzo Márquez; M. Sáenz de Rodrigáñez; L. Bermúdez; R. Robles; Francisco Javier Moyano
Aquaculture | 2013
Lorenzo Márquez; Margareth Øverland; Silvia Martínez-Llorens; T. Morken; Francisco Javier Moyano
Animal Feed Science and Technology | 2013
Gabriel A. Morales; M. Sáenz de Rodrigáñez; Lorenzo Márquez; Manuel Díaz; Francisco Javier Moyano
Animal Feed Science and Technology | 2012
T. Morken; Francisco Javier Moyano; Lorenzo Márquez; Mette Sørensen; Liv Torunn Mydland; Margareth Øverland