Evaluation of emamectin benzoate and substance EX against salmon lice in sea-ranched Atlantic salmon smolts

Experimental releases of Atlantic salmon smolts treated with emamectin benzoate (EB) against salmon lice have previously been used to estimate the significance of salmon lice on the survival of migrating smolts. In recent years, the salmon louse has developed reduced sensitivity to EB, which may inf...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Diseases of Aquatic Organisms
Main Authors: Skilbrei, Ove, Espedal, Per Gunnar, Nilsen, Frank, Garcia, Enrique Perez, Glover, Kevin A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Inter-Research 2015
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/281256
https://doi.org/10.3354/dao02832
Description
Summary:Experimental releases of Atlantic salmon smolts treated with emamectin benzoate (EB) against salmon lice have previously been used to estimate the significance of salmon lice on the survival of migrating smolts. In recent years, the salmon louse has developed reduced sensitivity to EB, which may influence the results of such release experiments. We therefore tested the use of 2 anti-lice drugs: EB was administered to salmon smolts in high doses by intra-peritoneal injection and the prophylactic substance EX (SubEX) was administered by bathing. A third, untreated control group was also established. Salmon were challenged with copepodids of 2 strains of salmon lice (1 EB-sensitive strain and 1 with reduced EB-sensitivity) in mixed-group experimental tanks. At 31 d post-challenge, the numbers of pre-adult lice on treated fish were around 20% compared with the control fish, with minor or no differences between the 2 treatments and lice strains. Both treatments therefore appeared to give the smolts a high degree of protection against infestation of copepodids of salmon lice. However, significantly lower growth of the EB-treatment group indicates that bathing the fish in SubEX is less stressful for smolts than intraperitoneal injection of EB.