An Epidemiological Investigation of the Re-Emergence of Pancreas Disease in Irish Farmed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) in 2002

In the early 1990’s pancreas disease (PD) was shown to be the most significant cause of mortality in Irish farmed salmon (Wheatley et al., 1995, Menzies et al., 1996, Crockford et al., 1999). At that time the aetiology of PD was uncertain but in 1995 it was conclusively shown that PD was caused by a...

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Main Authors: McLoughlin, M F, Peeler, E, Foyle, K L, O'Ceallachain, D, Geoghegan, F
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Marine Institute 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10793/239
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spelling ftmarineinst:oai:oar.marine.ie:10793/239 2024-09-09T19:30:22+00:00 An Epidemiological Investigation of the Re-Emergence of Pancreas Disease in Irish Farmed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) in 2002 McLoughlin, M F Peeler, E Foyle, K L O'Ceallachain, D Geoghegan, F 2003 http://hdl.handle.net/10793/239 en eng Marine Institute Marine Environment and Health Series;14 McLoughlin, M. F., Peller, E., Foyle, K. L., Rodger, H. D., O'Ceallachain, D. & Geoghegan, F., "An Epidemiological Investigation of the Re-Emergence of Pancreas Disease in Irish Farmed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) in 2002", Marine Environment and Health Series No. 14, Marine Institute 2003 1649-0053 http://hdl.handle.net/10793/239 MEHS Monograph 2003 ftmarineinst 2024-06-25T03:04:05Z In the early 1990’s pancreas disease (PD) was shown to be the most significant cause of mortality in Irish farmed salmon (Wheatley et al., 1995, Menzies et al., 1996, Crockford et al., 1999). At that time the aetiology of PD was uncertain but in 1995 it was conclusively shown that PD was caused by a virus subsequently named salmon pancreas disease virus (SPDV), (Nelson et al., 1995, McLoughlin et al., 1996). It has since been further classified and named salmonid alphavirus (Weston et al., 1999, Weston et al., 2002). The clinical and histopathological features of naturally occurring pancreas disease in farmed Atlantic salmon in Ireland were described by Murphy et al., 1992 and McLoughlin et al., 2002. The original epidemiological studies of PD in Ireland indicated that mortality rates up to 48% have occurred in farmed Atlantic salmon in their first year in the sea on some individual fish farms (Menzies et al., 1996). PD was recorded in over 70% of marine sites monitored and the majority of PD outbreaks occurred during August to October (Crockford et al., 1999). A serological survey for the presence of SPDV antibody in 1996 revealed 53% of the sites (9/17) were positive and that not all positive sites had recognised clinical signs of PD. This indicated a relatively low incidence and severity of PD at that time (McLoughlin et al., 1998). This pattern persisted until 2002 when there was a serious increase in both the incidence and severity of PD reported on farmed Atlantic salmon marine sites in Ireland. In order to identify factors associated with this re-emergence of PD in Irish farmed salmon, an in-depth epidemiological investigation was carried out on all marine sites. In trying to identify the cause of a disease from epidemiological studies the concept of time, place and individual is paramount, i.e. why did a particular disease occur in a particular animal or group of animals at a particular time in a particular place? Epidemiological study designs are chosen so that predictor variables are measured in ... Book Atlantic salmon Salmo salar Marine Institute Open Access Repository Menzies ENVELOPE(61.911,61.911,-73.437,-73.437)
institution Open Polar
collection Marine Institute Open Access Repository
op_collection_id ftmarineinst
language English
topic MEHS
spellingShingle MEHS
McLoughlin, M F
Peeler, E
Foyle, K L
O'Ceallachain, D
Geoghegan, F
An Epidemiological Investigation of the Re-Emergence of Pancreas Disease in Irish Farmed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) in 2002
topic_facet MEHS
description In the early 1990’s pancreas disease (PD) was shown to be the most significant cause of mortality in Irish farmed salmon (Wheatley et al., 1995, Menzies et al., 1996, Crockford et al., 1999). At that time the aetiology of PD was uncertain but in 1995 it was conclusively shown that PD was caused by a virus subsequently named salmon pancreas disease virus (SPDV), (Nelson et al., 1995, McLoughlin et al., 1996). It has since been further classified and named salmonid alphavirus (Weston et al., 1999, Weston et al., 2002). The clinical and histopathological features of naturally occurring pancreas disease in farmed Atlantic salmon in Ireland were described by Murphy et al., 1992 and McLoughlin et al., 2002. The original epidemiological studies of PD in Ireland indicated that mortality rates up to 48% have occurred in farmed Atlantic salmon in their first year in the sea on some individual fish farms (Menzies et al., 1996). PD was recorded in over 70% of marine sites monitored and the majority of PD outbreaks occurred during August to October (Crockford et al., 1999). A serological survey for the presence of SPDV antibody in 1996 revealed 53% of the sites (9/17) were positive and that not all positive sites had recognised clinical signs of PD. This indicated a relatively low incidence and severity of PD at that time (McLoughlin et al., 1998). This pattern persisted until 2002 when there was a serious increase in both the incidence and severity of PD reported on farmed Atlantic salmon marine sites in Ireland. In order to identify factors associated with this re-emergence of PD in Irish farmed salmon, an in-depth epidemiological investigation was carried out on all marine sites. In trying to identify the cause of a disease from epidemiological studies the concept of time, place and individual is paramount, i.e. why did a particular disease occur in a particular animal or group of animals at a particular time in a particular place? Epidemiological study designs are chosen so that predictor variables are measured in ...
format Book
author McLoughlin, M F
Peeler, E
Foyle, K L
O'Ceallachain, D
Geoghegan, F
author_facet McLoughlin, M F
Peeler, E
Foyle, K L
O'Ceallachain, D
Geoghegan, F
author_sort McLoughlin, M F
title An Epidemiological Investigation of the Re-Emergence of Pancreas Disease in Irish Farmed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) in 2002
title_short An Epidemiological Investigation of the Re-Emergence of Pancreas Disease in Irish Farmed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) in 2002
title_full An Epidemiological Investigation of the Re-Emergence of Pancreas Disease in Irish Farmed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) in 2002
title_fullStr An Epidemiological Investigation of the Re-Emergence of Pancreas Disease in Irish Farmed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) in 2002
title_full_unstemmed An Epidemiological Investigation of the Re-Emergence of Pancreas Disease in Irish Farmed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) in 2002
title_sort epidemiological investigation of the re-emergence of pancreas disease in irish farmed atlantic salmon (salmo salar l.) in 2002
publisher Marine Institute
publishDate 2003
url http://hdl.handle.net/10793/239
long_lat ENVELOPE(61.911,61.911,-73.437,-73.437)
geographic Menzies
geographic_facet Menzies
genre Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
op_relation Marine Environment and Health Series;14
McLoughlin, M. F., Peller, E., Foyle, K. L., Rodger, H. D., O'Ceallachain, D. & Geoghegan, F., "An Epidemiological Investigation of the Re-Emergence of Pancreas Disease in Irish Farmed Atlantic Salmon (Salmo salar L.) in 2002", Marine Environment and Health Series No. 14, Marine Institute 2003
1649-0053
http://hdl.handle.net/10793/239
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