An eighty-day feeding trial was conducted to evaluate the influence of different short-term
fasting and re-feeding strategies on growth and physiological responses in yellowfin seabream,
Acanthopagrus latus (2.4 ± 0.2 g) fingerlings. The fish were subjected to four different feeding
regimes, the control group fed four times daily to apparent satiation throughout the whole
feeding period, while the other three groups were deprived for 2, 4, and 8 days followed by 8,
16, or 32 days of refeeding (F2R8, F4R16, and F8R32, respectively) in repeated cycles for 80 days.
The fish in the control and F2R8 groups had the highest and the lowest total length, respectively
(P < 0.05). Fish in the F2R8 group relatively had higher catalase and glutathione-S-transferase
activities than other groups (P < 0.05). Furthermore, total protease, α-amylase, and alkaline
phosphatase activities in the F4R16 and F8R32 were higher than the F2R4 and control groups (P <
0.05). Overall, this study showed that compensatory growth in weight and length as well as
digestive enzyme activities were observed in the F4R16 and F8R32; however, the increase in the
activity of antioxidant enzymes in the F8R32 group indicated that oxidative stress remained after
80 days of re-feeding in the liver.