| Literature DB >> 30147798 |
Patrik J G Henriksson1,2, Andreu Rico3, Max Troell1,4, Dane H Klinger5, Alejandro H Buschmann6, Sonja Saksida7, Mohan V Chadag2, Wenbo Zhang8.
Abstract
Global seafood provides almost 20% of all animal protein in diets, and aquaculture is, despite weakening trends, the fastest growing food sector worldwide. Recent increases in production have largely been achieved through intensification of existing farming systems, resulting in higher risks of disease outbreaks. This has led to increased use of antimicrobials (AMs) and consequent antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in many farming sectors, which may compromise the treatment of bacterial infections in the aquaculture species itself and increase the risks of AMR in humans through zoonotic diseases or through the transfer of AMR genes to human bacteria. Multiple stakeholders have, as a result, criticized the aquaculture industry, resulting in consequent regulations in some countries. AM use in aquaculture differs from that in livestock farming due to aquaculture's greater diversity of species and farming systems, alternative means of AM application, and less consolidated farming practices in many regions. This, together with less research on AM use in aquaculture in general, suggests that large data gaps persist with regards to its overall use, breakdowns by species and system, and how AMs become distributed in, and impact on, the overall social-ecological systems in which they are embedded. This paper identifies the main factors (and challenges) behind application rates, which enables discussion of mitigation pathways. From a set of identified key mechanisms for AM usage, six proximate factors are identified: vulnerability to bacterial disease, AM access, disease diagnostic capacity, AMR, target markets and food safety regulations, and certification. Building upon these can enable local governments to reduce AM use through farmer training, spatial planning, assistance with disease identification, and stricter regulations. National governments and international organizations could, in turn, assist with disease-free juveniles and vaccines, enforce rigid monitoring of the quantity and quality of AMs used by farmers and the AM residues in the farmed species and in the environment, and promote measures to reduce potential human health risks associated with AMR.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotics; Antimicrobials; Aquaculture; Fish; Resistance; Seafood
Year: 2017 PMID: 30147798 PMCID: PMC6086308 DOI: 10.1007/s11625-017-0511-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sustain Sci ISSN: 1862-4057 Impact factor: 6.367
Fig. 1Proportionate growth of the human population, aquaculture, poultry, pigs, and cattle between 1980 and 2013, and the present composition of the aquaculture sector
Source (FAO 2016a; The World Bank 2017; FAO 2016b)
Fig. 2Antibiotic use in Atlantic salmon farming in the five top producing countries
Data from Marine Harvest (2015) and R. Gudding, Norwegian Veterinary Institute, Pers. Comm. (2013)
Fig. 3The number of reported incidents in EU, US, and Japanese customs involving antimicrobial residues. The data are not reported consistently, explaining some of the discrepancies and why no cases were reported in 2003
Sources EU’s Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed, US’s Food and Drug Administration, and Japan’s Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare
Standard rules proposed by the different certification schemes regarding AM use and management
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| Regulations | × | × | × | × | × | × | × |
| On-farm documentation | × | × | × | × | × | × | × |
| 100% Veterinary prescription | × | × | × | × | × | × | × |
| No prophylactic | × | × | × | × | × | × | × |
| Reg. repeated treatments | – | – | × | – | × | × | × |
| Banned antibiotics | – | – | × | × | – | – | – |
| No human antibiotics | – | – | × | × | – | – | – |
| Env. monitoring | – | – | – | × | – | – | – |
Banned antibiotics and some other rules might differ by country
Sources GLOBALGAP (globalgap.org); Safe Quality Food Institute (sqfi.com and fmi.org); GAA/ACC (gaalliance.org and aquaculturecertification.org); Naturland (naturland.de); DEBIO (debio.no); and KRAV (krav.se) (all accessed November 2016)
Fig. 4The figure visualizes the inter-linkages between underlying factors and AM use through a set of proximate factors. The underlying factors are organized from site-specific factors (e.g. animal and farmer), to those imposed at the international level. As each farm will be subject to a unique set of underlying factors, different combinations of proximate factors will up- or down-regulate consequent AM use. AM use itself also act on AMR, which could trigger additional AM use