MY ACCOUNT | NEWSLETTER |

Identifying Harmful Agents in Fish Farming


Aquatic animal source food (AASF) is known to benefit human health in at least three ways. They provide micronutrients, such as vitamin A, calcium, and iron, to prevent deficiencies and prevent disease. They contain the dominant source of the omega-3 long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), which may reduce heart disease risk and promote brain and eye health. In addition, these “blue” foods displace red and processed meat consumption that can cause adverse health conditions. Because people appreciate these health benefits, they are looking for sustainable ways to obtain seafood.

Aquaculture currently provides 50% of the seafood that humans consume and is expected to increase to 70% by 2050. Projected growth assessments demonstrate that marine fish, freshwater fish, crustaceans, and molluscs are expected to dominate as contributors to global seafood markets. However, aquatic animals are intricately linked to their environment, and exposed to chemical and pathogenic hazards that can disrupt seafood supply. Scientists from the Centre for Environment, Fisheries, and Aquaculture Science (CEFAS) and the University of Exeter described in a recently published paper a Seafood Risk Tool (SRT) that can detect these hazards so they can be controlled. 

Hazards to aquaculture

Aquatic animals’ physiology makes them especially prone to exposure and accumulation of various chemical and pathogen hazards present in water, sediments, and their food. Numerous hazards to AASF were identified, including:

  • Heavy metals — Substances, such as cadmium, mercury, lead, zinc, and copper, can impact the aquatic animal’s growth and development, and can also impact human health.
  • Persistent organic chemicals — Organic contaminants can bioaccumulate and biomagnify in aquatic animals. Dioxins, furans, and polychlorinated biphenyls can be absorbed through the intestine and passed to infants in breastmilk. Natural and anthropogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons are immunotoxic and carcinogenic, and polybrominated compounds are neurotoxic and cause endocrine dysfunction.
  • Radiological contaminants — Radioactivity levels from natural sources present in seafood are generally extremely low, but chronic radiation exposure can impact reproduction and early life stages.
  • Natural biotoxins — Phycotoxins, which are produced by certain microalgae and bacteria in the water, can bioaccumulate in filter-feeding animals. The predominant risk to humans is from contaminated mollusc consumption.
  • Veterinary pharmaceuticals — Veterinary medicine residue can live in edible seafood components, and antibiotic misuse can lead to antimicrobial resistance that may impact seafood consumers. 
  • Personal care chemicals — Chemicals from personal care products can enter waterways and accumulate in aquatic animals, which is a concern mostly in high population density urbanized waterways.
  • Allergens — Seafood allergies are increasing, because seafood consumption is increasing. Common allergens include parvalbumin, tropomyosin, and other proteins and peptides found in fish and shellfish muscles.
  • Viral pathogens — Viruses, such as white spot syndrome virus, oyster herpesvirus, and infectious salmon anemia virus, transmit efficiently within and between wild populations and captive stock, and significant production losses can occur in early life and grow-out phases. Viral pathogens that affect aquatic animals are not considered harmful to humans.
  • Bacterial pathogens — Bacterial agents that affect aquatic animals include Vibrio, Aeromonas, Flavobacterium, Pseudomonas, Streptococcus, Lactococcus, and Mycobacterium, and can cause significant losses during early life and grow-out phases. Some pathogens are considered zoonotic.
  • Protistan pathogens — Microbial eukaryotic organisms, such as Bonamia spp., Enterocytozoon spp., Paramoeba spp., and Ichthyophthirius spp, can infect aquatic animals, increasing mortality rates and causing product spoilage. 
  • Metazoan pathogens — Pathogens, such as platyhelminthes, cestodes, trematodes, nematodes, and crustacean parasites, can impact aquatic animals. Some have zoonotic potential.
  • Syndromes — Climate change, feed quality, host genetics, and chemical exposure may contribute to syndromes, such as red mark syndrome, proliferative gill inflammation, white feces syndrome, and epizootic shell disease. These conditions significantly impact yield in many aquaculture sectors.
  • Environmental pathogens — Members of the genus Vibrio, including V. vulnificus, V. parahaemolyticus, and V. cholerae, are responsible for human illness after eating and contacting seafood. Clinical symptoms include mild to severe gastroenteritis, septicemia, and death.
  • Anthropogenically derived pathogens — Enteric viruses, bacteria, and parasites that originate from humans, animals, and industrial sources can contaminate the waterways and cause food-borne illness when the infected seafood is consumed.
  • Zoonotic pathogens — Aquatic animal pathogens, including Anasakis spp., Paragonimus spp., Mycobacterium spp., Streptococcus agalactiae, and Diphyllobothrium spp., can cause infection in humans.

Seafood risk tool

The SRT provides a detailed profile of the impact of these hazards on aquatic animals at six key phases in the seafood supply chain, including early life, grow-out, production, harvesting and processing, international trading, and consumption. The SRT uses a two-step semi-quantitative risk assessment scheme to calculate hazard impact, and scores harm severity and harm likelihood. The SRT application requires explaining the particular aquaculture scenario, including data on the specific taxonomy, geography, seasonality, production method, product type, proposed market, and intended end-use. Results can be used to devise a biosecurity and seafood safety plan appropriate to the aquaculture scenario under investigation.

The SRT can minimize hazard interaction and decrease the impact on seafood supply, so that the aquaculture sector can supply safe, nutritious, and healthy products as demand for seafood rises.


Like0
Dislike0
  • Please enter a comment


Name *
Email address *
Comment *


* Required fields

Information on the processing of your personal data
We inform you that, in compliance with the provisions of current national and European regulations for the Protection of Personal Data and Services of the Information Society and Electronic Commerce, by sending us this form you are expressly giving your consent to Grupo Asís Biomedia , SL, (hereinafter, "ASIS GROUP") so that, as the person in charge, it may process your personal data in order to respond to your request for contact and information by electronic means.

Likewise, when you expressly consent, we will process your personal data to send you specialized information, newsletters, offers and exclusive promotions from GRUPO ASIS and related companies.

For the aforementioned purpose, GRUPO ASIS may transfer your data to other companies linked to GRUPO ASIS or to third party service providers for the management of electronic communications and other security services, even in cases where they are outside of the European Union, provided that they legally guarantee the adequate level of protection required by European regulations.

At any time you can withdraw the consent given and exercise the rights of access, rectification, deletion, portability of your data and limitation or opposition to its treatment by contacting GRUPO ASIS by sending an email to protecciondatos @ grupoasis.com, or by written communication to address at Centro Empresarial El Trovador, 8th floor, office I, Plaza Antonio Beltrán Martínez 1, 50002, Zaragoza (Spain), indicating in either case the Ref. Personal data and the right you exercise, as well as attaching a copy of your ID or replacement identification document.


I have read and accept the treatment of my data according to the informed purpose and according Legal notes and the Privacy Policy
I wish to receive commercial information from GRUPO ASIS and related companies



More news

Advancing the 3Rs: innovation, implementation, ethics and society

Like0
Dislike0

Automated Knowledge-Based Radiation Treatment Planning in Canine and Feline Nasal Tumors

Like0
Dislike0

Does Lung Function Imaging Modality Have a Dosimetric Impact On Functional Avoidance Treatment Planning: Assessment Using Prospective Clinical Trial Data

Like0
Dislike0

One Committed and Caring NC State Veterinary Student, So Many Choices

Like0
Dislike0

Dentalis Earns 5 VOHC® Seals, Positioning for Global Expansion in Animal Health

Like0
Dislike0

Newsletter

 
 

News of interest

EVENTS

Copyright © 2025 - All Rights Reserved
ISSN 2768-198X

Top