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Statistical and ecological challenges of monitoring parasitic salmon lice infestations in wild salmonid fish stocks

Authors :
Bengt Finstad
Peder A. Jansen
Ingeborg Palm Helland
Ola Håvard Diserud
Ingebrigt Uglem
Pål Arne Bjørn
Source :
Aquaculture Environment Interactions, Aquaculture Environment Interactions, Vol 7, Iss 3, Pp 267-280 (2015), Aquaculture environment interactions
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Ecological monitoring programmes should provide precise data to inform management, but the data quality is often limited by methodological challenges and the need for cost-effective sampling. Parasite infestations are particularly challenging to monitor due to complex interactions among hosts, parasites and the environment. In Norway, salmon lice infestations on wild salmonid fish have been mon- itored since 1992 to survey the potential transmission between farmed and wild salmonids. Here, we com- pared spatiotemporal variation in salmon lice levels with variations in local fjord conditions, including salinity, temperature and infestation pressure from salmon farms (measured as mean abundance of ma- ture female lice × number of farmed fish). We tested 3 different measures of infestation with different statis- tical properties. Our results confirm that, even after correcting for temperature and salinity effects, in - festation pressure from salmon farms significantly increases the probability of lice infestation in wild salmonids. The probability of infestation increases with fish body length, salmon farm infestation pres- sure and tem perature, and decreases with increasing freshwater influence. Furthermore, we found a signif- icant interaction between temperature and infestation pressure from salmon farms. When the infestation pressure from farms is low, temperature has a strong increasing effect on the probability of infestation, but as the infestation pressure from farms increases, tem- perature gradually becomes less important. The exact results vary somewhat depending on the measure of lice infestations used, but the same trend can be seen in all models. We discuss the statistical and biological complexities that make monitoring of salmon lice in wild populations challenging.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Aquaculture Environment Interactions, Aquaculture Environment Interactions, Vol 7, Iss 3, Pp 267-280 (2015), Aquaculture environment interactions
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6b2932390160df419b55d6a29e2b123f