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Publication Details
AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS
SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH
agricultural and biological sciences
The epidemiological and economic effects from systematic depopulation of Norwegian marine salmon farms infected with pancreas disease virus
Preventive Veterinary Medicine, Volume 132, Year 2016
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Description
Pancreas disease (PD) is a viral disease associated with significant economic losses in Scottish, Irish, and Norwegian marine salmon aquaculture. In this paper, we investigate how disease-triggered harvest strategies (systematic depopulation of infected marine salmon farms) towards PD can affect disease dynamics and salmon producer profits in an endemic area in the southwestern part of Norway. Four different types of disease-triggered harvest strategies were evaluated over a four-year period (2011–2014), each scenario with different disease-screening procedures, timing for initiating the harvest interventions on infected cohorts, and levels of farmer compliance to the strategy. Our approach applies a spatio-temporal stochastic model for simulating the spread of PD in the separate scenarios. Results from these simulations were then used in cost-benefit analyses to estimate the net benefits of different harvest strategies over time. We find that the most aggressive strategy, in which infected farms are harvested without delay, was most efficient in terms of reducing infection pressure in the area and providing economic benefits for the studied group of salmon producers. On the other hand, lower farm compliance leads to higher infection pressure and less economic benefits. Model results further highlight trade-offs in strategies between those that primarily benefit individual producers and those that have collective benefits, suggesting a need for institutional mechanisms that address these potential tensions. © 2016
Authors & Co-Authors
Brynildsrud, Ola Brønstad
Norway, Oslo
Folkehelseinstituttet
Rich, Karl M.
New Zealand, Lincoln
Lincoln University
Statistics
Citations: 8
Authors: 2
Affiliations: 5
Identifiers
Doi:
10.1016/j.prevetmed.2016.09.001
ISSN:
01675877
Study Design
Cohort Study