Finding the needle in the haystack: Comparison of methods for salmon louse enumeration in plankton samples
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/22934Dato
2021-03-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Bui, Samantha; Dalvin, Sussie; Vågseth, Tone; Oppedal, Frode; Fossøy, Frode; Brandsegg, Hege; Jacobsen, Ása; Nordi, Gunnvør á; Fordyce, Mark; Michelsen, Helena Kling; Finstad, Bengt; Skern-Mauritzen, RasmusSammendrag
The economic and social implications of salmon louse (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) epidemics in salmon aquaculture drive focus of the dispersal dynamics of the planktonic
larval stages. The vast spatial scale and high connectivity of the marine environment
creates difficult conditions to monitor the infective planktonic louse stage, whereby
the number of samples required for a representative description is bottlenecked by
processing capacity. This study assessed five quantification methods for accuracy and
precision in enumeration of lice in plankton samples, validated against the benchmark
method of light microscopy. Visual-based (fluorescence microscopy and automated
fluid imaging) and molecular-based (droplet digital PCR, quantitative fraction PCR and
quantitative PCR) were tested using high- and low-density plankton samples spiked
with louse copepodids, with spike numbers blind to assessors. We propose an approach to comparative assessment that uses the collective bias and deviation of a
test method to determine whether it is acceptably similar to the benchmark method.
Under this framework, no methods passed the comparative test, with only ddPCR
comparable to light microscopy (87% mean accuracy and 74% precision). qfPCR and
fluorescence microscopy were moderately efficient (88% and 67% accuracy, and 36%
and 52% precision respectively). Molecular techniques are currently restricted in distinguishing between larval stages, which is an essential distinction for some research
questions, but can be economical in processing numerous samples. Overall method
suitability will depend on the research objectives and resources available. These results provide evidence for operational accuracy for the tested methods and highlight
the direction for further development to optimize their use.
Forlag
WileySitering
Bui S, Dalvin ST, Vågseth T, Oppedal F, Fossøy F, Brandsegg H, Jacobsen Á, Nordi Gá, Fordyce M, Michelsen HK, Finstad B, Skern-Mauritzen R. Finding the needle in the haystack: Comparison of methods for salmon louse enumeration in plankton samples. Aquaculture Research. 2021Metadata
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Copyright 2021 The Author(s)