Assessment of sea lice (lepeophtheirus salmonis) management in New Brunswick, Canada using deltamethrin (AlphaMax®) through clinical field treatment and laboratory bioassay responses

Whyte, Shona K. and Westcott, Jillian D. and Jimenez, Daniel and Revie, Crawford W. and Hammell, K. Larry (2014) Assessment of sea lice (lepeophtheirus salmonis) management in New Brunswick, Canada using deltamethrin (AlphaMax®) through clinical field treatment and laboratory bioassay responses. Aquaculture, 422-423. pp. 54-62. ISSN 0044-8486 (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2013.11.027)

[thumbnail of Whyte-etal-Aquaculture2014-Assessment-of-sea-lice-Lepeophtheirus-salmonis-management-in-New-Brunswick]
Preview
Text. Filename: Whyte_etal_Aquaculture2014_Assessment_of_sea_lice_Lepeophtheirus_salmonis_management_in_New_Brunswick.pdf
Accepted Author Manuscript
License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 logo

Download (857kB)| Preview

Abstract

The control of the ectoparasite, sea lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis), on farmed Atlantic salmon in Eastern Canada was complicated by the development of resistance to emamectin benzoate, the primary in-feed medication used since 2000. Field efficacy and bioassay assessments were initiated to address the emergency authorization of deltamethrin (Alpha Max®) used in limited circumstances in 2009 and again in 2010. Under farming conditions present in the Bay of Fundy, deltamethrin consistently reduced pre-adult (male and female) and male adult lice stages in the range of 88-98% compared to pre-treatment levels. Cage-level reductions for both adult female and chalimus lice stages varied considerably with median reductions of around 50% or less commonly observed for either stage. In vitro bioassays using field collected mobile stages of sea lice generated average effective concentration (EC50) values that were lower for combined stages of pre-adult and adult male lice compared to either pre-adult female or adult female lice stages. Stage (p<0.001) and temporal (p<0.001) differences were observed for EC50 values. Both field treatment observations and in vitro assessments of sea lice responses reflected greater reductions after deltamethrin exposure for pre-adult and adult male lice compared to adult female lice stages. Variable response occurring in different lice categories is likely to affect the successful field application of this treatment and is an important factor to consider when deciding how best to report efficacy.