| Literature DB >> 25959256 |
A Gräns1, L Niklasson2, E Sandblom2, K Sundell2, B Algers1, C Berg1, T Lundh3, M Axelsson2, H Sundh2, A Kiessling3.
Abstract
Studies that address fish welfare before slaughter have concluded that many of the traditional systems used to stun fish including CO2 narcosis are unacceptable as they cause avoidable stress before death. One system recommended as a better alternative is electrical stunning, however, the welfare aspects of this method are not yet fully understood. To assess welfare in aquaculture both behavioural and physiological measurements have been used, but few studies have examined the relationship between these variables. In an on-site study aversive behaviours and several physiological stress indicators, including plasma levels of cortisol and ions as well as blood physiological variables, were compared in Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) stunned with CO2 or electricity. Exposure to water saturated with CO2 triggered aversive struggling and escape responses for several minutes before immobilization, whereas in fish exposed to an electric current immobilization was close to instant. On average, it took 5 min for the fish to recover from electrical stunning, whereas fish stunned with CO2 did not recover. Despite this, the electrically stunned fish had more than double the plasma levels of cortisol compared with fish stunned with CO2. This result is surprising considering that the behavioural reactions were much more pronounced following CO2 exposure. These contradictory results are discussed with regard to animal welfare and stress physiological responses. The present results emphasise the importance of using an integrative and interdisciplinary approach and to include both behavioural and physiological stress indicators in order to make accurate welfare assessments of fish in aquaculture.Entities:
Keywords: aquaculture; narcosis; slaughter; teleost; welfare
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25959256 PMCID: PMC4762244 DOI: 10.1017/S1751731115000750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animal ISSN: 1751-7311 Impact factor: 3.240
The main systems of stunning and killing fish and a summary of the recommendations provided by the World Organization for Animal Health and the European Food and Safety Authority
| System | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| CO2 narcosis | |
| Asphyxia in air or on ice | |
| Live chilling | |
| Salt bath | Should not be used to kill fish because they cause avoidable suffering before death |
| Ammonia solution | |
| Electro-immobilization | |
| Decapitation | |
| Evisceration of live fish | |
| Mechanical stunning | Can be appropriate for some species |
| Electrical stunning |
Includes physical exhaustion using electrical shocks.
Includes percussive stunning, spiking and shooting.
Figure 1Haematological variables and plasma ion in Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) stunned with dry electric exposure (a, black), CO2 exposure in water (b, grey), or controls immediately netted from the net pen (c, white). Data for haematocrit (d), haemoglobin concentration (e), mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration (f), sodium ion concentration (g), calcium ion concentration (h) and potassium ion concentration (i) are presented as means and error bars show s.e.m. Different letters indicate significant differences among treatments (P<0.05).
Figure 2Plasma levels of cortisol in Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) stunned with dry electric exposure (black), CO2 in water (grey) or controls netted immediately from the net pen (white). Data are presented as means and error bars show s.e.m. Different letters indicates significant differences among treatments (P<0.05).