Control of parasitic diseases in aquaculture

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Control of parasitic diseases in aquaculture. / Buchmann, Kurt.

In: Parasitology, Vol. 149, No. S14, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Buchmann, K 2022, 'Control of parasitic diseases in aquaculture', Parasitology, vol. 149, no. S14. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182022001093

APA

Buchmann, K. (2022). Control of parasitic diseases in aquaculture. Parasitology, 149(S14). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182022001093

Vancouver

Buchmann K. Control of parasitic diseases in aquaculture. Parasitology. 2022;149(S14). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182022001093

Author

Buchmann, Kurt. / Control of parasitic diseases in aquaculture. In: Parasitology. 2022 ; Vol. 149, No. S14.

Bibtex

@article{df7ff3bd4f5f41209019ec0ec16d9190,
title = "Control of parasitic diseases in aquaculture",
abstract = "Finfish aquaculture in freshwater and marine environments is continuously expanding globally, and the potential for a substantial further increase is well documented. The industry is supplying fish products for human consumption to the same extent as capture fisheries, and new fish species for domestication are still being selected by the industry. The challenge faced by all aquacultured species, classical and novel, is the range of pathogens associated with each new fish type. A fish host in its natural environment carries a series of more or less specific parasites (specialists and generalists). Some of these show a marked ability to propagate in aquaculture settings. They may then elicit disease when infection intensities in the confined aquaculture environment reach high levels. In addition, the risk of transmission of parasites from aquaculture enterprises to wild fish stocks adds to the parasitic challenge. Control programmes of various kinds are needed and these may include chemotherapeutants and medicines as the farmer's first and convenient choice, but mechanical, biological, immunological and genetic control methods are available solutions. New methods are still to be developed by scrutinizing the life cycle of each particular parasite species and pin-pointing the vulnerable stage to be targeted. As parasites exhibit a huge potential for adaptation to environmental changes, one must realize that only one approach rarely is sufficient. The present work therefore elaborates on and advocates for implementation of integrated control strategies for diseases caused by protozoan and metazoan parasites.",
author = "Kurt Buchmann",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1017/S0031182022001093",
language = "English",
volume = "149",
journal = "Parasitology",
issn = "0031-1820",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "S14",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Control of parasitic diseases in aquaculture

AU - Buchmann, Kurt

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Finfish aquaculture in freshwater and marine environments is continuously expanding globally, and the potential for a substantial further increase is well documented. The industry is supplying fish products for human consumption to the same extent as capture fisheries, and new fish species for domestication are still being selected by the industry. The challenge faced by all aquacultured species, classical and novel, is the range of pathogens associated with each new fish type. A fish host in its natural environment carries a series of more or less specific parasites (specialists and generalists). Some of these show a marked ability to propagate in aquaculture settings. They may then elicit disease when infection intensities in the confined aquaculture environment reach high levels. In addition, the risk of transmission of parasites from aquaculture enterprises to wild fish stocks adds to the parasitic challenge. Control programmes of various kinds are needed and these may include chemotherapeutants and medicines as the farmer's first and convenient choice, but mechanical, biological, immunological and genetic control methods are available solutions. New methods are still to be developed by scrutinizing the life cycle of each particular parasite species and pin-pointing the vulnerable stage to be targeted. As parasites exhibit a huge potential for adaptation to environmental changes, one must realize that only one approach rarely is sufficient. The present work therefore elaborates on and advocates for implementation of integrated control strategies for diseases caused by protozoan and metazoan parasites.

AB - Finfish aquaculture in freshwater and marine environments is continuously expanding globally, and the potential for a substantial further increase is well documented. The industry is supplying fish products for human consumption to the same extent as capture fisheries, and new fish species for domestication are still being selected by the industry. The challenge faced by all aquacultured species, classical and novel, is the range of pathogens associated with each new fish type. A fish host in its natural environment carries a series of more or less specific parasites (specialists and generalists). Some of these show a marked ability to propagate in aquaculture settings. They may then elicit disease when infection intensities in the confined aquaculture environment reach high levels. In addition, the risk of transmission of parasites from aquaculture enterprises to wild fish stocks adds to the parasitic challenge. Control programmes of various kinds are needed and these may include chemotherapeutants and medicines as the farmer's first and convenient choice, but mechanical, biological, immunological and genetic control methods are available solutions. New methods are still to be developed by scrutinizing the life cycle of each particular parasite species and pin-pointing the vulnerable stage to be targeted. As parasites exhibit a huge potential for adaptation to environmental changes, one must realize that only one approach rarely is sufficient. The present work therefore elaborates on and advocates for implementation of integrated control strategies for diseases caused by protozoan and metazoan parasites.

U2 - 10.1017/S0031182022001093

DO - 10.1017/S0031182022001093

M3 - Review

C2 - 35950444

VL - 149

JO - Parasitology

JF - Parasitology

SN - 0031-1820

IS - S14

ER -

ID: 318188412