Some changes in the physical qualities of muscle lipid of the freshwater murrel, Ophicephalus striatus (bloch.) during storage


Autoria(s): Ahmad, I.; Jafri, A.K.; Mustafa, S.
Data(s)

1976

Resumo

The present communication reports the changes in the specific gravity, coefficient of viscosity, fluidity and surface tension of the muscle lipid of O. striatus, a common freshwater murrel, when stored at room temp (32 ± 2°C) The specific gravity of muscle lipid was found to rise from 0.894 to 0.912 during the first 25 days of storage but registered the highest (0.925) when stored for 50 days. Surface tension seemed to rise with the duration of storage. This was, presumably, due to an increase in the forces with which the molecules in the surface of the lipid tended to compress the molecules below to the smallest possible volume. During the period of storage marked changes seemed to occur in the direction of an increase in the value of the coefficient of viscosity and a reciprocal decline in the fluidity. Evidently, the observed increase in the viscosity seemed to be the result of increased internal friction between different molecular layers of the lipid, whereas a decline in the fluidity was perhaps the consequence of its inverse correlation with the coefficient of viscosity.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/18306/1/FT13.1_076.pdf

Ahmad, I. and Jafri, A.K. and Mustafa, S. (1976) Some changes in the physical qualities of muscle lipid of the freshwater murrel, Ophicephalus striatus (bloch.) during storage. Fishery Technology, 13(1), pp. 76-77.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/18306/

Palavras-Chave #Chemistry
Tipo

Article

NonPeerReviewed