Proximate and fatty acid compositions of smoked underutilised South African mussel Choromytilus meridionalis
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2025/21022Keywords:
nutrition, protein, fatty acids, food security, hot smoking, underutilisedAbstract
Seafood is valued for its nutritional content; however, overfishing necessitates the focus on underutilised species to promote sustainable utilisation. We investigated the proximate and fatty acid compositions of hot-smoked Choromytilus meridionalis (black mussels) using AOAC International methods and gas chromatography. Lipid nutritional quality indices were calculated. Moisture content in mussels significantly (p < 0.05) decreased by 19% after hot smoking, whilst ash, protein, lipid, and carbohydrate contents increased by 98%, 42%, 46% and 49%, respectively. Hot smoking significantly increased the polyunsaturated (37.70 ± 1.06%) and omega-3 fatty acid (33.36 ± 1.23%) contents. Conversely, omega-6 and saturated fatty acids of hot-smoked mussels were significantly (p < 0.05) lower than those for raw mussels. The atherogenicity index and thrombogenicity index showed a significant reduction (p < 0.05), whilst the hypocholesterolaemic to hypercholesterolaemic ratio and the sum of EPA+DHA showed significant increases. This study shows that C. meridionalis is a valuable food with a high protein content and a well-balanced fatty acid composition, rich in omega-3 fatty acids. This study was the first to investigate the macronutrients of C. meridionalis.
Significance:
Choromytilus meridionalis is one of three bivalve species cultivated on a commercial scale along the West Coast of South Africa; however, it is underrealised as a commercial food product. The growing mussel industry has been considered a great potential for the alleviation of poverty, job creation, and food security. This research may provide mussel farmers, fish processing industries, and the community with information about processing opportunities using C. meridionalis. Successful product development may contribute to alleviating malnutrition and increasing food security.
Open data set: https://doi.org/10.25381/cput.27014896.v1
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

All articles are published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence
Copyright is retained by the authors. Readers are welcome to reproduce, share and adapt the content without permission provided the source is attributed.
Disclaimer: The publisher and editors accept no responsibility for statements made by the authors
How to Cite
- Abstract 498
- PDF 682
- EPUB 259
- XML 250
- Peer review history 484
Funding data
-
Cape Peninsula University of Technology
-
National Research Foundation
Grant numbers 117998








.png)