24 research outputs found
Monitoring and Control of a Continuous Grignard Reaction for the Synthesis of an Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient Intermediate Using Inline NIR spectroscopy
Continuous Hydrolysis and Liquid–Liquid Phase Separation of an Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient Intermediate Using a Miniscale Hydrophobic Membrane Separator
Development of a Multi-Step Synthesis and Workup Sequence for an Integrated, Continuous Manufacturing Process of a Pharmaceutical
Brewery by-products (yeast and spent grain) as protein sources in gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata) feeds
Two trials were conducted to test the effect of partial replacement of fishmeal by two brewery industry by-products, yeast and spent grain, included in isoproteic and isolipidic diets for gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata), having in mind the commercial availability of these by-products. According to the obtained results, the inclusion of up to 30% brewers' spent yeast and 15% spent grain in the feed for gilthead seabream gave similar results in terms of growth, food conversion and fillet final composition to a feed with fish meal as the main protein source and show a protein digestibility of 89–95%. Taking into account that these by-products are produced in large quantities in Europe, they can be a potential source of protein to reduce the use of plant proteins or fish/animal by-products (trimmings) and increase the sustainability of both sectors, brewery industry and aquaculture.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
Brewery by-products (yeast and spent grain) as protein sources in gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata) feeds
Brewery by-products (yeast and spent grain) as protein sources in gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata) feeds
Two trials were conducted to test the effect of partial replacement of
fishmeal by two brewery industry byproducts, yeast and spent grain,
included in isoproteic and isolipidic diets for gilthead sea bream
(Sparus aurata), having in mind the commercial availability of these
by-products. According to the obtained results, the inclusion of up to
30\% brewers' spent yeast and 15\% spent grain in the feed for gilthead
seabream gave similar results in terms of growth, food conversion and
fillet final composition to a feed with fish meal as the main protein
source and show a protein digestibility of 89-95\%. Taking into account
that these by-products are produced in large quantities in Europe, they
can be a potential source of protein to reduce the use of plant proteins
or fish/animal by-products (trimmings) and increase the sustainability
of both sectors, brewery industry and aquaculture
Apparent digestibility coefficients of brewer's by-products used in feeds for rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata)
A trial was conducted to test the effect of partial replacement of fishmeal by two brewery industry byproducts, yeast and spent grain, included in isoproteic (41% CP) and isolipidic (22% CL) diets for gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata) and rainbow trout (Oncorhyncus mykiss), having in mind the availability of these byproducts. A first step before an ingredient is included in a commercial feed is to evaluate the nutritional quality of these raw materials by measuring their digestibility. Thus, the apparent digestibility coefficients of the diets and ingredients were determined after a 30 days feeding trial and faecal collection. Apparent digestibility coefficients of these by products in the case of rainbow trout varied between 75 and 88% whereas for gilthead seabream was between 71 and 88%. According to the results obtained, the inclusion of 20–30% of brewers' spent yeast and spent grain in the feed for carnivorous fish either from fresh (rainbow trout) or marine (gilthead seabream) gave similar results to a feed with fish meal as the main protein source and show a good protein, lipid and amino acid digestibility. Taking into account that these by-products are produced in large quantities in Europe, they can be a potential source of protein to reduce the use of plant proteins or fish/animal byproducts (trimmings) and increase the sustainability of both sectors, brewery industry and aquaculture.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
