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The moisture and low volatile materials are removed by heating at 95-100C under partial vacuum. It is
applicable to fish and fish products, including frozen scallops, both IQF and block frozen, and fish by-
products.
Sample preparation
1. Sample preparation should take into account the type of product and how it is used and prepared
by the consumer
o forproducts that are packed in water, brine or similar medium that is normally discarded
by the consumer: open the package and drain the product on an appropriate size sieve for
1 to 12 minutes. Comminute the part of the sample retained by the screen until a
homogeneous blend is obtained.
o forproducts that are packed in a medium that may be or is normally used by the
consumer, e.g., fish canned in its own juice or oil: transfer the entire contents of the
package into a homogenizer and blend for one minute or until a homogeneous mix is
obtained.
o forsmoked fish and smoked fish products: remove the sample from the container with
forceps or other suitable instrument, place on a coarse screen and allow to drain for ca 5
minutes. Place the sample on a paper towel or other clean absorbent paper and blot.
Repeat blotting using a second and third piece of towel. Comminute the sample until a
homogeneous blend is obtained. If the sample texture is too tough for homogenization,
pass the sample through a grinder a sufficient number of times to obtain a uniform mix. A
food chopper may suffice as an initial step if the sample size is large.
o for brined or salt-cured fish: scrape off as many loose salt crystals as possible with a
spatula, if any are present, then wipe off any remaining salt crystals or moisture with a
paper towel. Comminute the sample until a homogeneous blend is obtained.
o forraw fish, fresh or thawed: pass the sample through a grinder a sufficient number of
times to obtain a homogeneous blend.
o forprocessed products containing no separable liquid: thaw in the package (if frozen) and
pass the sample through a grinder a sufficient number of times to obtain a uniform mix.
o for frozen scallops: obtain five sample units, remove surface glaze from the scallops
under running water until no ice can be felt on the surface of the scallops but it is evident
that the ice crystals remain within the product; the interior of the product remains frozen.
Block frozen product should be gently broken up to individual scallops or scallop pieces
and ice within the block should be removed until the surface of the product is free of ice.
Place the scallops on a sieve of appropriate size and drain for 1 to 12 minutes. Obtain a
total of approximately 100 g of scallop meat from the five sample units. Comminute the
100 g sample until a homogenous blend is attained.
2. Collect the homogenized sample into a clean, sealable plastic cup or glass bottle.
3. Store the sample in a refrigerator or freezer until required.
4. Ensure that the prepared sample is still homogeneous prior to weighing. If liquid separates from
the sample, reblend before use.
5. Since salted samples have a tendency to foam, care should be taken to see that the dish is not
over-filled.
Procedure
Calculation
100 (P-a)
percent moisture = %
P
P = weight in g of sample
a = weight in g of dried sample
Possible errors
Loss of VOLATILE FATTY ACIDS (VFA's), and LACTIC ACID in SILAGE or any other
FERMENTED PRODUCTS
Most likely UNDERESTIMATE DRY MATTER
This error is relatively small
Maillard product formation (protein:CHO complex)
Proximate analysis: Ash
The ash fraction contains all the mineral elements jumbled together. It would be more useful to know the
amounts of different individual elements. But it allows calculation of Nitrogen-Free-Extract (by
difference) from dry matter (see below) and provides an estimate of contamination (too much soil or too
much salt added.
This method consists of oxidizing all organic matter in a weighed sample of the material by incineration
and determining the weight of the ash remaining. It is applicable to fish, fish products, and other materials
with a low carbohydrate content.
Note that the high temperature may cause the volatilization of certain elements (particularly K, Na, Cl,
and P) and may also cause the mineral matter to melt and fuse.
Sample preparation
1. Sample preparation should take into account the type of product and how it is used and prepared
by the consumer.
o For fish and fish products that contains no free liquid: comminute the sample until
homogeneous.
o For products that are packed in water, brine or similar medium that is normally discarded
by the consumer: open the package and drain the product on an appropriate size sieve for
1 to 1 minutes. Comminute the part of the sample retained by the screen until a
homogeneous blend is obtained.
o For products that are packed in a medium that may be or is normally used by the
consumer, e.g. fish canned in its own juice or oil: transfer the entire contents of the
package into a homogenizer and blend for one minute or until a homogeneous mix is
obtained.
o For fish meal: grind the sample in a mill or other suitable apparatus until it will pass
through a no. 20 sieve.
2. Collect the homogenized sample into a thoroughly cleaned, sealable plastic cup or glass bottle.
3. Store the sample in a refrigerator or freezer until required.
4. Ensure that the prepared sample is still homogeneous prior to weighing. If liquid separates from
the sample, thoroughly reblend before use.
Procedure
1. Accurately weight ca 5 g of sample in a crucible wich has been ignited and tared (use 2.5 g of
sample in the case of products which have a tendency to swell).
2. Place crucible in drying oven at 100 oC for 24 hours.
3. Transfer to cool muffle furnace and increase the temperature step wise to 550 oC 5 oC.
4. Maintain temperature for 8 hours or until a white ash is obtained.
5. If white ash is not obtained after 8 hours, moisten ash with distilled water, slowly dry on a hot
plate, and re-ash at 550 oC to constant weight. Repeat if necessary.
6. Remove crucible to a desiccator and weight soon after cool.
Calculation
Calculation of ash content on dry basis (when moisture content is known) as follows:
% ash (wet)
% ASH (dry)= x 100
(100 - % moisture)
Possible errors
High temperature may volatile some elements such as chloride, zinc, selenium, iodine, etc. Consequently,
ash determination tends to underestimate mineral contents This error is small
Estimated by a process developed by a Danish chemist/brewer, Johan Kjeldahl. He discovered that "all
protein" contains about the same amount of nitrogen (16%). He analyzed for nitrogen, which is relatively
easy, and calculated crude protein on the basis: 100/16 = 6.25, therefore: NITROGEN x 6.25 = CRUDE
PROTEIN
In the presence of sulfuric acid, sodium sulphate and a catalyst, the amino nitrogen of many organic
materials is converted to ammonium sulphate. The ammonia is distilled from an alkaline medium and
absorbed in standardized mineral acid. The ammonia is determined by back titration with a standardized
mineral base.
This method is applicable to fish, fish products, and fish by-products. Certain species of fish such as
dogfish contain non-protein nitrogen; therefore, when analysing these species use AOAC procedure 7.024
(12th Edition) for non-protein nitrogen to correct the results.
Sample preparation
1. Sample preparation should take into account the type of product and how it is used and prepared
by the consumer:
o forfish and fish products that contain no free liquid: comminute the sample until
homogeneous.
o forproducts that are packed in water, brine or similar medium that is normally discarded
by the consumer: open the package and drain the product on an appropriate size sieve for
1 to 1 minutes. Comminute the part of the sample retained by the screen until a
homogeneous blend is obtained.
o forproducts that are packed in a medium that may be or is normally used by the
consumer, e.g., fish canned in its own juice or oil: transfer the entire contents of the
package into a homogenizer and blend for one minute or until a homogeneous mix is
obtained.
o forfish meal: grind the sample in a mill or other suitable apparatus until it will pass
through a no. 20 sieve.
2. Collect the homogenized sample into a thoroughly cleaned, sealable plastic cup or glass bottle.
3. Store the sample in a refrigerator or freezer until required.
4. Ensure that the prepared sample is still homogeneous prior to weighing. If liquid separates from
the sample, thoroughly reblend before use.
Reagents
Procedure
1. Accurately weigh a suitable quantity of fine-grained material (ca 1.2 g for fishmeal, ca 2.5 g for
solubles or homogenized fish) and place in digestion flask.
2. Add sequentially 15 g Na2SO4, 1 g CuSO4, one or two selenized boiling granules and 25 mL of
conc H2SO4 to the flask.
3. Digest until solution is almost colourless or light green (2 hrs for inorganic material) and then at
least a further 30 minutes. Do not heat any part of the Kjeldahl flask above the level of the
digestion mixture.
4. Cool (do not allow to solidify), and cautiously add 200 mL water. Add additional boiling granules
(if necessary) to prevent bumping.
5. Pipette 100 mL 0.1 N HCl into a 500 mL erlenmeyer flask, add 1 mL Conway's indicator and
place the flask under the condenser ensuring that the condenser tip is immersed in the acid
solution. (volume of standardized HCl used in distillation may be varied according to the
expected nitrogen content of the sample).
6. Tilt the Kjeldahl flask containing the digested sample and add 100 mL of 50% NaOH solution
slowly down the side of the Kjeldahl flask so that it forms a layer underneath the digestion
mixture.Immediately connect the flask to the distilling bulb of the distillation apparatus. Rotate
flask to thoroughly mix contents.
7. Heat until all ammonia has passed over into the standard acid. Collect approximately 150 mL.
Caution, flask will bump. Remove immediately (prolonged boiling and too rapid distillation of
acid during digestion should be avoided as loss of ammonia may occur).
8. Wash tip of condenser and titrate excess standard HCl in distillate with NaOH standard solution
(detailed titration procedure) .
Calculation
(A - B) x 1.4007
% Nitrogen (wet) = x 100
weight (g) of sample
where:
Calculate nitrogen content on dry basis (when moisture content is known) as follows:
% Nitrogen (wet)
% Nitrogen (dry)= x 100
(100 - % moisture)
where 6.25 is the protein-nitrogen conversion factor for fish and fish by-products.
This procedure assumes ALL nitrogen present in the sample are in PROTEIN form. This
assumption is NOT necessarily true. Nitrogen could be in nucleic acid (RNA, DNA), urea...
Different proteins need different correction factors because they have different amino acid
sequences
The use of concentrated sulfuric acid at high temperatures poses a considerable hazard, as does
the use of some of the possible catalysts
The technique is time consuming to carry-out.
A dried, ground sample is extracted with diethyl ether which dissolves fats, oils, pigments and other fat
soluble substances. The ether is then evaporated from the fat solution. The resulting residue is weighed
and referred to as ether extract or crude fat. Both the ether and the samples must be free of moisture to
avoid coextraction of water-soluble components in the sample such as carbohydrates, urea, lactic acid,
glycerol, etc. If water-soluble components are present in large amounts in the sample, they are washed out
of the sample prior to drying. Low temperatures are used to evaporate the ether and remove residual
moisture to prevent oxidation of the fat. Petroleum ether does not dissolve all of the plant lipid material,
and therefore it cannot be substituted for diethyl ether.
This method is applicable for the determination of crude fat in dried forages and mixed feeds. It is not
applicable for oilseeds, baked and/or expanded products (pet foods), liquid feeds, sugar products, and
feeds containing dairy products.
Sample preparation
1. A) Weigh 1.5 to 2 g of ground sample into a thimble recording the weight to nearest 0.1 mg
(W1). Weigh a second subsample for dry matter determination.
- OR -
B) If the sample contains large amounts of carbohydrates, urea, glycerol, lactic acid or water-
soluble components, weigh 2 g sample to nearest 0.1 mg (W1) into a small filter cone. Extract
with five 20 mL portions of deionized water allowing each portion to drain, then insert the paper
and sample into thimble.
2. Dry for 5 hr at 100oC.
3. Dry beakers to be used for fat determination for at least 1 hr at 100oC. Cool the appropriate
number of fat beakers in a desiccator. Weigh and record the weight to the nearest 0.1 mg (W2).
4. When the drying period is over, remove the samples from the oven to a desiccator. (This is a
convenient stopping point. The samples should be stored in a desiccator if not immediately
extracted.)
Reagents
Anhydrous Diethyl Ether, purified for fat extraction. To prevent ether from absorbing water, purchase it
in small containers and keep containers tightly closed.
SAFETY MEASURES
Ether has an extremely low flash point:
Procedure
Extraction:
1. Line the fat beakers up in front of the extractor and match the thimbles with their corresponding
fat beakers.
2. Slip the thimble into a thimble holder and clip the holder into position on the extractor.
3. Add about 40 mL of diethyl ether (one glass reclaiming tube full) to each fat beaker.
4. Wearing white gloves, slip the beaker into the ring clamp and tightly clamp the beaker onto the
extractor. If the clamp is too loose, insert another gasket inside the ring.
5. Raise the heaters into position. Leave about a 1/4 inch gap between the beaker and the heating
element.
6. Turn on the heater switch, the main power switch, and the condenser water.
7. After the ether has begun to boil, check for ether leakage. This can be detected by sniffing around
the ring clamp. If there is leakage, check the tightness of the clamp and if necessary replace the
gasket(s).
8. Extract for minimum of 4 hr on a Hi setting (condensation rate of 5 to 6 drops per second), or for
16 hr on a Low setting (condensation rate of 2 to 3 drops per sec).
9. After extraction, lower the heaters, shut off the power and water, and allow the ether to drain out
of the thimbles (about 30 min). This is a good stopping point.
1. Remove the thimble from the holder, and rinse the holder with a small portion of diethyl ether
from the washbottle. Clip an ether reclaiming tube in place and reattach the fat beaker.
2. Reposition the heaters and turn on the electricity and water. Proceed to distill the ether using a Hi
setting. Watch Closely.
3. Distill until a thin layer of ether remains in the bottom of the beaker, and then lower the heater.
Do not allow beakers to boil dry. Overheating will oxidize the fat. When the last beaker has
finished, shut off the power and water.
4. Wipe the exterior of the beaker clean with a Kimwipe as it is being removed from the extractor.
5. Empty the reclaiming tubes into the "USED" diethyl ether container.
6. Place the tray of beakers in an operating hood to finish evaporating the ether. If there is no hurry,
air moving through the hood will be sufficient without heat. A steambath may be used to speed up
the evaporation. Beakers should remain in the hood until all traces of ether are gone. Carefully
sniff each beaker to determine if any ether remains.
7. Place the beakers in a 102C gravity convection oven. Warning: If a beaker containing ether is
placed in the oven an explosion may occur.
8. Dry for 1/2 hr. No longer. Excessive drying may oxidize the fat and give high results.
9. Cool in a desiccator and weigh and record weight to the nearest 0.1 mg (W2). The fat beakers are
best cleaned by warming on a steambath or on a hot plate on a low setting. Add some used ether
to dissolve the fat. The use of a rubber policeman is helpful.
10. After soaking the beakers in Alconox detergent, wash them using hot water and vigorous
brushing. The thimbles are best cleaned by blowing out with air.
If doing a proximate analysis, the residue left in the thimble may be used to determine crude fiber.
Calculation
Percent Crude Fat (Ether Extract), DM basis:
(AWres - Wta)
% Crude fat (wet) = x DM (%)
weight (g) of sample
Possible errors
This process assumes ALL substances soluble in ether are fats This assumption is NOT TRUE.
Plant pigments, wax which are also soluble in ether, but do NOT have the same nutritional values
of fats However, this error is generally small.
Two boiling processes simulate the pH conditions of the digestive tract, acidic in the stomach and alkaline
in the small intestine, but nothing more. However, the enzymatic digestion is not simulated.
Reagents
Sulfuric acid (H2SO4) 1.25% - 0.255 0.005 N. 12, 5g, 98% concentrated to 1000 ml with
distilled water. Control the concentration by titration.
Potassium hydroxide (KOH) 1.25% - 0.223 0.005 N, free from carbonate. 12.5 g to 1000 ml
with distilled water. Control the concentration by titration.
n-octanol as antifoam.
Anhydrous acetone
Procedure
1. Determine separately the sample moisture by heating in an oven at 105 C to constant weight.
Cool in a desiccator.
2. Weight accurately 1 g about of grinded sample (1 mm about) approximately with 1 mg. ==> W1
3. Add 1.25% sulfuric acid up to the 150 ml notch, after preheating by the hot plate in order to
reduce the time required for boiling.
4. Add 3-5 drops of n-octanol as antifoam agent.
5. Boil 30 minutes exactly from the onset of boiling.
6. Connect to vacuum for draining sulfuric acid.
7. Wash three times with 30 ml (crucible filled up to the top) of hot deionized water, connecting
each time to compressed air for stirring the content of crucible.
8. After draining the last wash, add 150 ml of preheated potassium hydroxide (KOH) 1.25% and 3-5
drops of antifoam.
9. Boil 30 minutes.
10. Filter and wash as point 7.
11. Perform a last washing with cold deionized water aimed to cool the crucibles and then wash three
times the crucible content with 25 ml of acetone, stirring each time by compressed air.
12. Remove the crucibles and determine the dry weight after drying in an oven at 105 C for an hour
or up to constant weight. Let cool in a desiccator. This weight (W2)represents the crude fiber plus
ash content in comparison to initial weight.
Calculation
(W2 - W1)
% Crude fiber (wet) = x 100
W1
Possible errors
This is the most unsatisfactory principle of the Proximate Analysis. Major problem:
1. acid and base solubilize some of the true fiber (particularly hemicellulose, pectin and lignin).
2. Cellulose too is partially lost. Hence, crude fiber underestimates true fiber.
The number or value obtained in this procedure, therefore, is practically meaningless. Most laboratories
have phased out the CF term and replaced it with the Van Soest "Detergent Fiber" determination.
A very inaccurate name indeed. This fraction has nothing to do with nitrogen and it's not an extract either.
NFE supposedly represents the soluble carbohydrate of the feed, such as starch and sugar. Crude fiber
represents insoluble carbohydrate.
Calculation
% NFE = % DM - (% EE + % CP + % ash + % CF)
Possible errors
This is the ONLY component in the Proximate Analysis which is not determined ANALYTICALLY but
is calculated by difference. Therefore, NFE accumulates all of the errors that existe in other proximate
analysis components (CF is the biggest error)
The concept behind the detergent fiber analysis is that plant cells can be divided into less digestible cell
walls (contains hemicellulose, cellulose and lignin) and mostly digestible cell contents (contains starch
and sugars). Van Soest separated these two components successfully by use of two detergents: a neutral
detergent (Na-lauryl sulfate, EDTA, pH =7.0) and an acid detergent (cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide
in 1 N H2SO4).
Hemicellulose, cellulose and lignin are indigestible in non-ruminants, while Hemicellulose and Cellulose
are partially digestible in ruminants. NDF = Hemicellulose + Cellulose + Lignin ADF = Cellulose +
Lignin
Neutral Detergent Fiber is a good indicator of "bulk" and thus feed intake. Acid detergent fiber is a good
indicator of digestibility and thus energy intake
Figure: Principle of detergent partitioning of the fiber fraction by Van Soest
Although aquaculture does not deal with ruminants at all, it may be useful to be aware of these analysis.
For instance dealing with plant material as imortant feed ingredient or dealing with herbivorous fish.
Reagents
Procedure