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The effect of a warmer climate on the salmon lice infection pressure from Norwegian aquaculture

Anne Dagrun Sandvik, Sussie Dalvin, Rasmus Skern‐Mauritzen, Morten D. Skogen

2021ICES Journal of Marine Science35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Climate change can hamper sustainable growth in the aquaculture industry by amplifying and adding to other environmental challenges. In Norway, salmon lice-induced mortality in wild salmonid populations is identified as a major risk factor for further expansion. Higher temperatures will induce increased production of salmon lice larvae, decreased developmental time from non-infective nauplii to infectious copepods, and higher infectivity of copepodids. In a warmer climate, a modelling exercise shows how these three factors lead to a significant increase in the infection pressure from farmed to wild salmonids, where the infectivity of copepodids is the term with the highest sensitivity to temperature changes. The total infection pressure gradually increases with increasing temperature, with an estimated twofold if the temperature increases from 9°C to 11°C. Thus, making it even harder to achieve a sustainable expansion of the industry with rising water temperature. This study demonstrates how bio-hydrodynamic models might be used to assess the combined effects of future warmer climate and infection pressure from salmon lice on wild salmonids. The results can be used as an early warning for the fish-farmers, conservation stakeholders and the management authorities, and serve as a tool to test mitigation strategies before implementation of new management plans.

Topics & Concepts

AquacultureBiologyInfectivityFisheryClimate changeFish <Actinopterygii>EcologyVirologyVirusParasite Biology and Host InteractionsPhysiological and biochemical adaptationsMarine and fisheries research
The effect of a warmer climate on the salmon lice infection pressure from Norwegian aquaculture | Litcius