SCRC: SCRC RTG 1.6 – Research training, National Institute of Health Sciences, Japan (Damian May, SARDI)
Tactical Research Fund: optimisation of treatment of Ichthyophthirius multifiliis in farmed trout
Massive losses of farmed trout and native fish occurred due to Ichthyophthirius multifilis in 2012. The losses have not only had substantial impacts on commercial aquaculture operations and limited the availability of trout and native fish for the public water stocking programs of the Victorian and New South Wales governments. The timing of this work is critical, to develop and implement with key farmers new health management methods and reduce mortalities before next summer.
Ichthyophthirius multifilis has a direct lifecycle with an adult in the cells of the fish’s surface and asexual reproduction in the environment. In aquaculture systems heavy infections develop rapidly. A previous project DPI Victoria-funded project identified I. multifilis as the highest priority health issue in the Victorian trout industry and developed permits for access to new treatments for trout and other freshwater finfish aquaculture industries.
Treatment for I. multifilis centres on husbandry and strategic chemical control, but treatment dose and timing have not been optimised. Treatments include formalin, chloramine-T, or hydrogen peroxide, which are applied to the water. These products target only the environmental life cycle stages. Strategic treatment aims to kill all environmental stages, with a second dose to kill newly emerged stages after the previous treatment. The relationship between parasite lifecycle, temperature, parasite strain and water quality is currently unknown.
Growers assume that the dose is the same as the concentration applied to the system, but concentrations of these compounds are altered by water quality. This reduces efficacy and can make approved label doses ineffective. Treatments are also stressful to fish; treatments can cause substantial gill damage. Strategies for managing dose to balance efficacy and optimum fish performance need to be developed.
Better management of I. multifilis will decrease mortality, increase growth and quality and decrease husbandry costs in affected industries.
Final report
Tactical Research Fund: Shark Futures - determining the most suitable index of abundance for the school shark (Galeorhinus galeus) stock assessment: review and future directions to ensure best recovery estimates
Theme 1 - Demonstrating Sustainability: Evidence-Based and Low Risk Management for Shark-Associated Fisheries
Since 1992, school shark stocks were assessed as overfished in Australia and has been ever since. The most recent stock production of school sharks was estimated between 9–14% of original levels leading school sharks to be considered seriously overfished and listed as Conservation Dependent under the EPBC Act 1999. Under such listing, a stock rebuilding strategy policy had to be developed and needs to be implemented as conditions of the SESSF Wildlife Trade Operation (WTO) accreditation. The objectives of this rebuilding strategy states that school shark stocks have to recover to the limit reference biomass level within a biologically reasonable timeframe. The TAC for incidental take of the species was progressively reduced to well below the sustainable yield estimated by the SharkRAG. Although this reduction of TAC was considered to be sufficient, current models suggest school shark stocks will not rebuild within the period required under the Rebuilding Strategy. This lack of recovery is in apparent disagreement with catch observations by fishers and SharkRAG industry members. However, management of the stock aimed at reducing catch levels has altered the fishing pattern so that the traditional CPUE index of abundance can no longer be relied on as an index of stock size for school shark. The model is therefore unable to update current assumptions regarding the productivity of the stock. If the model is in error regarding such productivity, so that rebuilding is occurring at a faster or slower rate than predicted, such trends will not be identified. Such uncertainty associated with the school shark assessment has to a significant extent paralysed SE MAC consideration of management arrangements for this species. A valid index of abundance that will reveal current trends in stock status is required.