How delousing affect the short-term growth of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)

Infestations with salmon lice and subsequent salmon lice management is one of the most challenging and costly aspects of marine salmonid aquaculture . Both the handling and treatment, specifically non-medicinal treatment, against salmon lice cause stress and physical injuries to the host, the Atlant...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Aquaculture
Main Authors: Cecilie Sviland Walde, Marit Stormoen, Jostein Mulder Pettersen, David Persson, Magnus Vikan Røsæg
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2022
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2022.738720
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Summary:Infestations with salmon lice and subsequent salmon lice management is one of the most challenging and costly aspects of marine salmonid aquaculture . Both the handling and treatment, specifically non-medicinal treatment, against salmon lice cause stress and physical injuries to the host, the Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar ). This in turn leads to reduced appetite and increased mortality. In this study, we have estimated the short-term growth loss of Atlantic salmon related to treatments (thermal, mechanical, hydrogen peroxide bath, freshwater bath and combination medicinal baths) for removal of salmon lice. To achieve this, we have obtained daily production data at cage-level from 2014 to 2019 from three large Norwegian aquaculture companies. We have used the registered feed-amount, number of fish and seawater temperature at cage level to calculate the thermal growth coefficient (TGC) of 635 fish-groups the week before a pre-treatment starvation period and the week after 2530 different treatments to estimate the reduction in TGC. We modelled this outcome using a mixed effect linear regression model, with treatment method as the main fixed effect of interest and fish weight, seawater temperature, smolt-age and year-class included as fixed effects. Results showed a period of suboptimal feeding and growth after all treatment methods, where non-medicinal treatment methods had a significantly larger negative effect on growth compared to medicinal treatments. The results also showed that timing of treatment played a role in the outcome of a treatment. The short-term biomass-loss in one cage following one non-medicinal treatment was estimated to 31,200kg (average cage containing 150,000 fish weighing 3kg, and seawater temperature of 10°C). Thus, there could exist a potential for increased production in the Atlantic salmon aquaculture industry by reducing the number of delousing operations.