EcoFish

The problem of sea lice infestation of farmed salmon has become a major issue not only for the salmon farmers themselves but also for environmentalists, retails and consumers who are concerned about the effects the transfer of lice to wild populations of salmon and the effect that treatments to remove the lice may have on the environment and on the quality if the fish produced.

Originally lice were treated with organophosphate pesticides and more recently with hydrogen peroxide, but the use of both these materials is now banned, leaving only one effective treatment, emamectin benzoate. However, there is now concern that lice are becoming resistant to this last effective treatment, so an alternative method of controlling the parasite is urgently needed. One solution that has been tried in recent years is biological control through the use of wrasse which can clean the lice off salmon, thus avoiding the need for any chemical treatments. Whilst this is ostensibly an ideal solution to the problem, the wild capture of the large numbers of wrasse that are needed by the salmon farming industry, has also come under attack from environmentalists, whilst farmers and regulators remain concerned about other diseases being transferred from the wild wrasse to the salmon.
This project seeks to resolve all of the above issues by developing the technology for spawning and rearing the most promising cleaner fish, ballan wrasse, in captivity. This will allow large numbers of disease free fish to be produced both economically and sustainably. It will also look into the management of wrasse in salmon cages in order to achieve the effective removal of lice

Norsk prosjekteier

Universitetet i Nordland

Prosjektperiode

01.01.2008 - 31.12.2010

Budsjett

Total: 1 594 995 €

Prosjektnettside

http://www.eco-fish.org/

Andre partnere

Bioforsk, Arctic Agriculture and Land Use Division, Norway
Viking fish farms Ltd Ardtoe Marine labortory, Scotland
Martin Ryan Institute (MRI), Ireland