Foods (Nov 2021)

Evaluating the Lipid Quality of Yellowfin Tuna (<i>Thunnus albacares</i>) Harvested from Different Oceans by Their Fatty Acid Signatures

  • Valentina F. Domingues,
  • Mário Quaresma,
  • Sara Sousa,
  • Mónica Rosas,
  • Breixo Ventoso,
  • Maria Leonor Nunes,
  • Cristina Delerue-Matos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10112816
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 11
p. 2816

Abstract

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The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of the fishing location on yellowfin tuna’s (YFT; Thunnus albacares) white muscle total lipid (TL) content and fatty acid profile. The comparison included 45 YFT loins, equally divided between the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans. The ocean had no significant influence on YFT TL content, total PUFA and total n-3 PUFA (p > 0.05), averaging 1.09 g/100 g of muscle, 229.2 and 192.8 mg/100 g of muscle, respectively. On the other hand, the YFT harvested on the Indian Ocean displayed significantly higher contents of both SFA and MUFA totals than the Atlantic Ocean counterparts (p < 0.05), while the YFT harvested in the Pacific Ocean presented intermediate values, not differing significantly from the other two origins. The YFT from the Indian and Pacific oceans held twice the n-6 PUFA content recorded in the Atlantic YFT (44.1 versus 21.1 mg/100 g of muscle). Considering the recommended daily intake of EPA plus DHA is 250 mg, the consumption of 100 g of YFT from the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans would provide 149.2 mg, 191.8 mg or 229.6 mg of EPA plus DHA, representing 59.7%, 76.7% or 91.8% of the recommended daily intake, respectively.

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