jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture v1.0

Bivalve aquaculture is a diverse industry, with a wide range of species grown in subtidal and intertidal culture systems in coastal environments around world. Despite the diversity of farming approaches, unwanted biofouling and predatory pests are a universal problem threatening productivity and pro...

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Main Authors: Cahill, Patrick, Atalah, Javier, Cunningham, Shaun, Day, Andrew, Fletcher, Lauren, South, Paul, Forrest, Barrie, Hopkins, Grant
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4111087
https://zenodo.org/record/4111087
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4111087
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.4111087 2023-05-15T15:59:11+02:00 jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture v1.0 Cahill, Patrick Atalah, Javier Cunningham, Shaun Day, Andrew Fletcher, Lauren South, Paul Forrest, Barrie Hopkins, Grant 2020 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4111087 https://zenodo.org/record/4111087 unknown Zenodo https://github.com/jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture/tree/v1.0 https://github.com/jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture/tree/v1.0 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4111044 Embargoed Access info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess Software SoftwareSourceCode article 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4111087 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4111044 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Bivalve aquaculture is a diverse industry, with a wide range of species grown in subtidal and intertidal culture systems in coastal environments around world. Despite the diversity of farming approaches, unwanted biofouling and predatory pests are a universal problem threatening productivity and profitability. Various pest control approaches have been trialled, but industry uptake has been elusive due to the typically fine balance between pest and bivalve physiological tolerances (i.e., ‘therapeutic window’) and operational challenges related infrastructure, scalability, and quality control. This study aimed to address these factors for acetic acid (AcOH), arguably the best-studied and most broadly applicable reactive treatment for bivalve aquaculture. Using case studies of farmed New Zealand green-lipped mussels ( Perna canaliculus Gmelin 1791) and Pacific oysters ( Crassostrea gigas Thunberg 1793), AcOH tolerances of various size classes of these bivalves were determined in a series of laboratory experiments and cross-referenced to corresponding data for biofouling and predatory pests. Resulting ‘therapeutic windows’ formed the basis of provisional treatment parameters, being 2% AcOH for 60 seconds or 4% AcOH for 30 seconds for P. canaliculus and C. gigas , respectively. A ‘quality control’ measurement was also developed, consisting of a field-implementable colorimetric titration to monitor actual AcOH concentrations. Three independent field experiments on operational P. canaliculus and C. gigas farms subsequently served to refine and validate the treatment parameters and associated operational procedures. For P. canaliculus , AcOH treatment had overall positive impacts on commercially relevant measures of aquaculture production, with the best performing treatment regimens of 1% or 2% AcOH for 60 seconds resulting in almost three times as many individual P. canaliculus per section of growing rope. Incorporating a subsequent air-drying step was also shown to reduce required AcOH immersion times, providing opportunities to enhance operational efficiencies via more rapid treatments. The provisional treatment parameters for C. gigas of 4% AcOH for 30 seconds were also highly effective against biofouling pests in the field and resulted in no detectable mortality of the culture species. Overall, this study demonstrates the utility of carefully refined and validated AcOH treatments to control problematic pest in bivalve aquaculture. It is essential to accurately determine ‘therapeutic windows’ for any given bivalve culture species and developing understanding of crop-pest interactions would better inform treatment timing and frequency. Such approaches could feed into wider frameworks to optimally manage pests below economically damaging thresholds, with AcOH ideally being one option in an arsenal of management interventions. Article in Journal/Newspaper Crassostrea gigas DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Pacific New Zealand
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
description Bivalve aquaculture is a diverse industry, with a wide range of species grown in subtidal and intertidal culture systems in coastal environments around world. Despite the diversity of farming approaches, unwanted biofouling and predatory pests are a universal problem threatening productivity and profitability. Various pest control approaches have been trialled, but industry uptake has been elusive due to the typically fine balance between pest and bivalve physiological tolerances (i.e., ‘therapeutic window’) and operational challenges related infrastructure, scalability, and quality control. This study aimed to address these factors for acetic acid (AcOH), arguably the best-studied and most broadly applicable reactive treatment for bivalve aquaculture. Using case studies of farmed New Zealand green-lipped mussels ( Perna canaliculus Gmelin 1791) and Pacific oysters ( Crassostrea gigas Thunberg 1793), AcOH tolerances of various size classes of these bivalves were determined in a series of laboratory experiments and cross-referenced to corresponding data for biofouling and predatory pests. Resulting ‘therapeutic windows’ formed the basis of provisional treatment parameters, being 2% AcOH for 60 seconds or 4% AcOH for 30 seconds for P. canaliculus and C. gigas , respectively. A ‘quality control’ measurement was also developed, consisting of a field-implementable colorimetric titration to monitor actual AcOH concentrations. Three independent field experiments on operational P. canaliculus and C. gigas farms subsequently served to refine and validate the treatment parameters and associated operational procedures. For P. canaliculus , AcOH treatment had overall positive impacts on commercially relevant measures of aquaculture production, with the best performing treatment regimens of 1% or 2% AcOH for 60 seconds resulting in almost three times as many individual P. canaliculus per section of growing rope. Incorporating a subsequent air-drying step was also shown to reduce required AcOH immersion times, providing opportunities to enhance operational efficiencies via more rapid treatments. The provisional treatment parameters for C. gigas of 4% AcOH for 30 seconds were also highly effective against biofouling pests in the field and resulted in no detectable mortality of the culture species. Overall, this study demonstrates the utility of carefully refined and validated AcOH treatments to control problematic pest in bivalve aquaculture. It is essential to accurately determine ‘therapeutic windows’ for any given bivalve culture species and developing understanding of crop-pest interactions would better inform treatment timing and frequency. Such approaches could feed into wider frameworks to optimally manage pests below economically damaging thresholds, with AcOH ideally being one option in an arsenal of management interventions.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cahill, Patrick
Atalah, Javier
Cunningham, Shaun
Day, Andrew
Fletcher, Lauren
South, Paul
Forrest, Barrie
Hopkins, Grant
spellingShingle Cahill, Patrick
Atalah, Javier
Cunningham, Shaun
Day, Andrew
Fletcher, Lauren
South, Paul
Forrest, Barrie
Hopkins, Grant
jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture v1.0
author_facet Cahill, Patrick
Atalah, Javier
Cunningham, Shaun
Day, Andrew
Fletcher, Lauren
South, Paul
Forrest, Barrie
Hopkins, Grant
author_sort Cahill, Patrick
title jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture v1.0
title_short jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture v1.0
title_full jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture v1.0
title_fullStr jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture v1.0
title_full_unstemmed jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture v1.0
title_sort jatalah/acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture v1.0
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4111087
https://zenodo.org/record/4111087
geographic Pacific
New Zealand
geographic_facet Pacific
New Zealand
genre Crassostrea gigas
genre_facet Crassostrea gigas
op_relation https://github.com/jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture/tree/v1.0
https://github.com/jatalah/Acetic-acid-immersion-a-reactive-pest-treatment-for-bivalve-aquaculture/tree/v1.0
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4111044
op_rights Embargoed Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4111087
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4111044
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