Project number: 2009-315.19
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $9,167.69
Principal Investigator: Susan Gibson-Kueh
Organisation: Murdoch University
Project start/end date: 28 Aug 2011 - 14 Dec 2021
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Western Australia has a great potential for increased aquaculture activities. According to the Aquaculture Council of WA, the main concern of her members has been lack of easy access to fish health veterinary services. Disease is a major limiting factor in aquaculture of both established as well as potentially important aquaculture fish species in WA, e.g. barramundi, kingfish. Aquaculture will provide an alternate source of food fish amidst reports of declining wild fish stocks. There is the potential of further growing an industry that will provide jobs directly as well as indirectly in downstream activities in seafood processing.

Histopathology has been recognized as an invaluable tool in fish disease diagnosis. The Australian College of Veterinary Scientists recently added aquatic animal health as a new fellowship program in 2010 and there is currently only one person enrolled. This program involves a very intensive professional training program with approved experts amounting to 25 hours a week over 154 weeks, and attendance at relevant workshops and conferences, which will need dedicated funding. This endeavour will not only benefit the local aquaculture industry directly by making available a specialist fish health veterinarian, but also provide better trained veterinarians and farm staff through her teaching activities at the tertiary and postgraduate levels. PI's research into significant diseases in collaboration with her colleagues at Murdoch University and Fish Health Laboratory, Dept. of Fisheries WA will also benefit the industry via better understanding of disease and control strategies.

Objectives

1. Professional development of PI via membership & fellowship program with the Australian College of Veterinary Scientists in aquatic animal health in particular, fish pathobiology
2. Development of PI in the delivery of veterinary disease diagnostic services to aquaculturists in WA and Australia
3. PI's fish disease research activities will create a better understanding of significant diseases in aquaculture
4. Dissemination of knowledge via PI participation in tertiary & postgraduate training of veterinarians, farm managers & operational staff, publications in journals, presentations at conferences and production of digitized slide DVDs on fish disease

Related research

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