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Disentangling the role of sea lice on the marine survival of Atlantic salmon.

Authors :
Wiik Vollset, Knut
Dohoo, Ian
Karlsen, Ørjan
Halttunen, Elina
Olav Kvamme, Bjørn
Finstad, Bengt
Wennevik, Vidar
Diserud, Ola H.
Bateman, Andrew
Friedland, Kevin D.
Mahlum, Shad
Jørgensen, Christian
Qviller, Lars
Krkošek, Martin
Åtland, Åse
Torgeir Barlaup, Bjørn
Source :
ICES Journal of Marine Science / Journal du Conseil; Jan/Feb2018, Vol. 75 Issue 1, p50-60, 11p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The effects of sea lice on the marine survival of wild salmonids are widely debated. In Norway this debate has reached a crescendo as the Norwegian government has recently ratified a management system where the growth in the salmonid aquaculture industry will be conditional on regional estimated impact of salmon lice on wild fish. Sea lice have thus become the most prominent obstacle to the stated political aim of quintupling aquaculture production in Norway by 2050. Scientific documentation that salmon lice impact the marine survival of salmon is robust. However, it is also evident that marine survival of salmon is strongly impacted by other factors, and that the effect of salmon lice is most likely an integral part of these other mortality factors. In this paper, our goal is to discuss and give advice on how managers and policy makers should handle this complexity, and to identify the greatest challenges in using scientific results to construct robust management rules. Inadequate extrapolation from the scale of known effects to the scale of management implementation may initially give a false impression of scientific certainty, but will eventually fuel upsetting disagreements among stakeholders as they gradually uncover the shaky foundation of the implemented policy. Thus, using a single model and parameter to determine management advice is not warranted, as no single data point reflects the natural complexity of nature. Furthermore, robust management rules should be based on unambiguous definitions of key concepts. Finally, despite the scientific consensus that salmon lice are a risk to salmon, studies on wild populations in situ that accurately quantify the impact of salmon lice are still urgently needed. We give advice on how this can be accomplished. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10543139
Volume :
75
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
ICES Journal of Marine Science / Journal du Conseil
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
127681130
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsx104