National Survey of the Sea Lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis Krøyer and Caligus elongates Nordmann) on Fish Farms in Ireland - 2003

Sea lice are regarded as having the most commercially damaging effect on cultured salmon in the world with major economic losses to the fish farming community resulting per annum (Bristow and Berland, 1991; Jackson and Costello, 1991). They affect salmon in a variety of ways; by reducing fish growth...

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Main Authors: O'Donohoe, P, Kennedy, S, Kane, F, Naughton, O, Tierney, D, Copley, L, Jackson, D
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Marine Institute 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10793/390
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spelling ftmarineinst:oai:oar.marine.ie:10793/390 2023-05-15T15:32:55+02:00 National Survey of the Sea Lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis Krøyer and Caligus elongates Nordmann) on Fish Farms in Ireland - 2003 O'Donohoe, P Kennedy, S Kane, F Naughton, O Tierney, D Copley, L Jackson, D 2004 http://hdl.handle.net/10793/390 en eng Marine Institute Fishery Leaflet;184 O'Donohoe, P., Kennedy, S., Kane, F., Naughton, O., Tierney, D., Copley, L. & Jackson, D., "National Survey of the Sea Lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis Krøyer and Caligus elongates Nordmann) on Fish Farms in Ireland - 2003", Fishery Leaflet, Marine Institute 2004 0332-1789 http://hdl.handle.net/10793/390 Leaflet Monograph 2004 ftmarineinst 2022-07-27T09:39:04Z Sea lice are regarded as having the most commercially damaging effect on cultured salmon in the world with major economic losses to the fish farming community resulting per annum (Bristow and Berland, 1991; Jackson and Costello, 1991). They affect salmon in a variety of ways; by reducing fish growth; by causing loss of scales, which leaves the fish open to secondary infections (Wootten et al., 1982); and by damaging the fish, which reduces its marketability. The two species of sea lice found on cultured salmonids in Ireland are Caligus elongatus Nordmann, a species of parasite that infests over 80 different types of marine fish, and Lepeophtheirus salmanis Kroyer, which infests only salmon and other salmonids. L. salmonis is regarded as the more serious parasite of the two species and has been found to occur most frequently on farmed salmon (Jackson and Minchin, 1992). Most of the damage caused by these parasites is thought to be mechanical, carried out during the course of attachment and feeding (Kabata, 1974; Brandal et al., 1976; Jones et al., 1990). Inflammation and hyperplasia (enlargement caused by an abnormal increase in the number of cells in an organ or tissue) have been recorded in Atlantic salmon in response to infections with L. salmonis (Jones et al., 1990; Jonsdottir et al., 1992; Nolan et al., 2000). Increases in stress hormones caused by sea lice infestations have been suggested to increase the susceptibility of fish to infectious diseases (MacKinnon, 1998). Severe erosion around the head caused by heavy infestations of L. salmonis has been recorded previously (Pike, 1989; Berland, 1993). This is thought to occur because of the rich supply of mucus secreted by mucous cell-lined ducts in that region (Nolan et al., 1999). In experimental and field investigations carried out in Norway heavy infestation was found to cause fish mortalities (Finstad et al., 2000). Book Atlantic salmon Marine Institute Open Access Repository Norway Kabata ENVELOPE(157.156,157.156,62.126,62.126)
institution Open Polar
collection Marine Institute Open Access Repository
op_collection_id ftmarineinst
language English
topic Leaflet
spellingShingle Leaflet
O'Donohoe, P
Kennedy, S
Kane, F
Naughton, O
Tierney, D
Copley, L
Jackson, D
National Survey of the Sea Lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis Krøyer and Caligus elongates Nordmann) on Fish Farms in Ireland - 2003
topic_facet Leaflet
description Sea lice are regarded as having the most commercially damaging effect on cultured salmon in the world with major economic losses to the fish farming community resulting per annum (Bristow and Berland, 1991; Jackson and Costello, 1991). They affect salmon in a variety of ways; by reducing fish growth; by causing loss of scales, which leaves the fish open to secondary infections (Wootten et al., 1982); and by damaging the fish, which reduces its marketability. The two species of sea lice found on cultured salmonids in Ireland are Caligus elongatus Nordmann, a species of parasite that infests over 80 different types of marine fish, and Lepeophtheirus salmanis Kroyer, which infests only salmon and other salmonids. L. salmonis is regarded as the more serious parasite of the two species and has been found to occur most frequently on farmed salmon (Jackson and Minchin, 1992). Most of the damage caused by these parasites is thought to be mechanical, carried out during the course of attachment and feeding (Kabata, 1974; Brandal et al., 1976; Jones et al., 1990). Inflammation and hyperplasia (enlargement caused by an abnormal increase in the number of cells in an organ or tissue) have been recorded in Atlantic salmon in response to infections with L. salmonis (Jones et al., 1990; Jonsdottir et al., 1992; Nolan et al., 2000). Increases in stress hormones caused by sea lice infestations have been suggested to increase the susceptibility of fish to infectious diseases (MacKinnon, 1998). Severe erosion around the head caused by heavy infestations of L. salmonis has been recorded previously (Pike, 1989; Berland, 1993). This is thought to occur because of the rich supply of mucus secreted by mucous cell-lined ducts in that region (Nolan et al., 1999). In experimental and field investigations carried out in Norway heavy infestation was found to cause fish mortalities (Finstad et al., 2000).
format Book
author O'Donohoe, P
Kennedy, S
Kane, F
Naughton, O
Tierney, D
Copley, L
Jackson, D
author_facet O'Donohoe, P
Kennedy, S
Kane, F
Naughton, O
Tierney, D
Copley, L
Jackson, D
author_sort O'Donohoe, P
title National Survey of the Sea Lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis Krøyer and Caligus elongates Nordmann) on Fish Farms in Ireland - 2003
title_short National Survey of the Sea Lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis Krøyer and Caligus elongates Nordmann) on Fish Farms in Ireland - 2003
title_full National Survey of the Sea Lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis Krøyer and Caligus elongates Nordmann) on Fish Farms in Ireland - 2003
title_fullStr National Survey of the Sea Lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis Krøyer and Caligus elongates Nordmann) on Fish Farms in Ireland - 2003
title_full_unstemmed National Survey of the Sea Lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis Krøyer and Caligus elongates Nordmann) on Fish Farms in Ireland - 2003
title_sort national survey of the sea lice (lepeophtheirus salmonis krøyer and caligus elongates nordmann) on fish farms in ireland - 2003
publisher Marine Institute
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/10793/390
long_lat ENVELOPE(157.156,157.156,62.126,62.126)
geographic Norway
Kabata
geographic_facet Norway
Kabata
genre Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
op_relation Fishery Leaflet;184
O'Donohoe, P., Kennedy, S., Kane, F., Naughton, O., Tierney, D., Copley, L. & Jackson, D., "National Survey of the Sea Lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis Krøyer and Caligus elongates Nordmann) on Fish Farms in Ireland - 2003", Fishery Leaflet, Marine Institute 2004
0332-1789
http://hdl.handle.net/10793/390
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