Thermal injuries in Atlantic salmon in a pilot Laboratory trial
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/17591Date
2019-09-27Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Gismervik, Kristine; Gåsnes, Siri Kristine; Gu, Jinni; Stien, Lars Helge; Madaro, Angelico; Nilsson, JonatanAbstract
Thermal delousing is a new method for removing sea lice from farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L). We investigated thermally-related tissue injuries in Atlantic salmon in a pilot laboratory trial to describe the acute effect of high water temperatures (34–38 °C). Acute tissue injuries in gills, eyes, brain and possible also nasal cavity and thymus were seen in salmon exposed to water temperatures of 34 - 38 °C in 72 to 140 s. This implies that exposing salmon to such water temperatures is a welfare risk, not only due to the direct tissue injuries that may also be dependent on exposure time, but also due to risk of thermal pain and aversion, including flight reactions.
Publisher
ElsevierCitation
Gismervik K, Gåsnes SK, Gu J, Stien LH, Madaro A, Nilsson J. Thermal injuries in Atlantic salmon in a pilot Laboratory trial. Veterinary and Animal Science. 2019Metadata
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