Abstract:
BACKGROUND : In an effort to characterize the fat body and other adipose tissue in the Nile crocodile and the effects
of pansteatitis on the structure and composition of the adipose tissue, we evaluated the regional variation in
structure and fatty acid composition of healthy farmed crocodiles and those affected by pansteatitis.
METHODS : Adipose tissue samples were collected from the subcutaneous, visceral and intramuscular fat and the
abdominal fat body of ten 4-year old juvenile crocodiles from Izinthaba Crocodile Farm, Pretoria, South Africa while
pansteatitis samples were collected from visceral and intramuscular fat of crocodiles that had died of pansteatitis at
the Olifant River, Mpumalanga, also in South Africa. Histomorphology, ultrastrustucture and fatty acid composition
by fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analysis were conducted.
RESULTS : Histological examination showed regional variations in the adipose tissue especially in the collagen
content of the ECM, tissue perfusion and division into lobes and lobules by fibrous capsule. Considerable fibrosis,
mononuclear cell infiltration especially by macrophages and lymphocytes and toxic changes in the nucleus were
observed in the pansteatitis samples.
Regional variation in lipid composition especially in Myristoleic (C14:1), Erucic acid (C22:1n9), and Docosadienoic
acid (C22:2n6) was observed. Most of the saturated and trans fatty acids were found in significant quantities in the
pansteatitis samples, but had very low levels of the cis fatty acid and the essential fatty acids with C18 backbone.
CONCLUSION : This study demonstrates that there exists some regional variation in histomorphology and fatty acid
composition in the healthy adipose tissue of the Nile crocodile. It also showed that pansteatitis in the Nile crocodile
might have been triggered by sudden change in energy balance from consumption of dead fish; and probable
exposure to toxic environmental conditions with the evidence of up scaled monounsaturated long chain fatty acids
composition and toxic changes in the leucocytes observed in pansteatitis in the present study.