Genre
- Abstract
The objective of this study was to estimate the infestation pressure (a measure of the dose of exposure of parasitic sea lice which could result in the infestation of a new fish host) applied by Lepeophtheirus salmonis for the Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick, in the Atlantic salmon aquaculture industry, using the Fish-iTrends database for 2009-2018. Infestation pressures were calculated as temporally weighed average abundances of sea lice with a time lag within a site (IIP) and among sites (EIP). The EIP was also spatially weighted with a Gaussian kernel density estimate for bandwidths ranging from 1 to 60 km. A multivariable linear mixed model for the abundance of adult female (AF) was utilized. The EIP with a bandwidth of 10 km had the best fit as determined with the Akaike's Information Criterion. AF within and among sites, and pre-adult and adult male abundances resulted in an increase in the abundance of AF (all p <0.001). Sea surface water temperature and topical treatments were significant predictors in the abundance of AF in our final model (p < 0.001). This study concludes that sea lice burdens within salmon farms in the Bay of Fundy, are affected by within-site management and could be improved by synchronizing treatments among sites.
Language
- English