Stephen C Ives, Alexander G Murray, John D Armstrong
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引用次数: 0
摘要
寄生在海水鲑科(鲑形目:鲑鱼科)水产养殖生产设施中的寄生海虱(桡足目:海虱科)被认为可能会对野生鲑鱼和海鳟种群造成压力。本研究利用苏格兰大陆西海岸和西岛的监测数据,估算了养殖大西洋鲑鱼(Salmo salar L.)上的成年雌性大马哈鱼虱(Lepeophtheirus salmonis (Krøyer))数量与野生海鳟(溯河产卵的 S. trutta L.)上幼年和移动大马哈鱼虱发生量之间的关联。滞后模式与鲑虱从卵到感染期的发育时间一致,使用模型偏差进行评估。养殖场中成年雌性 L. salmonis 数量与野生鳟鱼中幼年 L. salmonis 数量之间存在明显的正相关关系。这种关联符合一种因果关系,即养殖大西洋鲑鱼上的虱目鲑桡足类数量增加会导致野生海鳟上的鲑桡足类数量增加。
Association of ectoparasite Lepeophtheirus salmonis counts on farmed Atlantic salmon and wild sea trout in Scotland.
Parasitic sea lice (Copepoda: Caligidae) colonising marine salmonid (Salmoniformes: Salmonidae) aquaculture production facilities have been implicated as a possible pressure on wild salmon and sea trout populations. This investigation uses monitoring data from the mainland west coast and Western Isles of Scotland to estimate the association of the abundance of adult female Lepeophtheirus salmonis (Krøyer) colonising farmed Atlantic salmon Salmo salar L. with the occurrence of juvenile and mobile L. salmonis on wild sea trout, anadromous S. trutta L. The associations were evaluated using generalised linear mixed models incorporating farmed adult female salmon louse abundances which are temporally lagged relative to dependent wild trout values. The pattern of lags, which is consistent with time for L. salmonis development between egg and infective stage, was evaluated using model deviances. A significant positive association is identified between adult female L. salmonis abundance on farms and juvenile L. salmonis on wild trout. This association is consistent with a causal relationship in which increases in the number of L. salmonis copepodids originating from lice colonising farmed Atlantic salmon cause an increase of L. salmonis abundance on wild sea trout.
期刊介绍:
DAO publishes Research Articles, Reviews, and Notes, as well as Comments/Reply Comments (for details see DAO 48:161), Theme Sections and Opinion Pieces. For details consult the Guidelines for Authors. Papers may cover all forms of life - animals, plants and microorganisms - in marine, limnetic and brackish habitats. DAO''s scope includes any research focusing on diseases in aquatic organisms, specifically:
-Diseases caused by coexisting organisms, e.g. viruses, bacteria, fungi, protistans, metazoans; characterization of pathogens
-Diseases caused by abiotic factors (critical intensities of environmental properties, including pollution)-
Diseases due to internal circumstances (innate, idiopathic, genetic)-
Diseases due to proliferative disorders (neoplasms)-
Disease diagnosis, treatment and prevention-
Molecular aspects of diseases-
Nutritional disorders-
Stress and physical injuries-
Epidemiology/epizootiology-
Parasitology-
Toxicology-
Diseases of aquatic organisms affecting human health and well-being (with the focus on the aquatic organism)-
Diseases as indicators of humanity''s detrimental impact on nature-
Genomics, proteomics and metabolomics of disease-
Immunology and disease prevention-
Animal welfare-
Zoonosis