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The impact and control of biofouling in marine aquaculture: a review
Fitridge, I.; Dempster, T.; Guenther, J.; de Nys, R. (2012). The impact and control of biofouling in marine aquaculture: a review. Biofouling (Print) 28(7): 649-669. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08927014.2012.700478
In: Biofouling. Taylor & Francis: Chur; New York. ISSN 0892-7014; e-ISSN 1029-2454, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Antifouling
    Aquaculture
    Fauna > Aquatic organisms > Aquatic animals > Fish
    Fauna > Aquatic organisms > Aquatic animals > Shellfish
    Fouling
Author keywords
    net; sea-cage

Authors  Top 
  • Fitridge, I.
  • Dempster, T.
  • Guenther, J.
  • de Nys, R.

Abstract
    Biofouling in marine aquaculture is a specific problem where both the target culture species and/or infrastructure are exposed to a diverse array of fouling organisms, with significant production impacts. In shellfish aquaculture the key impact is the direct fouling of stock causing physical damage, mechanical interference, biological competition and environmental modification, while infrastructure is also impacted. In contrast, the key impact in finfish aquaculture is the fouling of infrastructure which restricts water exchange, increases disease risk and causes deformation of cages and structures. Consequently, the economic costs associated with biofouling control are substantial. Conservative estimates are consistently between 5–10% of production costs (equivalent to US$ 1.5 to 3 billion yr -1), illustrating the need for effective mitigation methods and technologies. The control of biofouling in aquaculture is achieved through the avoidance of natural recruitment, physical removal and the use of antifoulants. However, the continued rise and expansion of the aquaculture industry and the increasingly stringent legislation for biocides in food production necessitates the development of innovative antifouling strategies. These must meet environmental, societal, and economic benchmarks while effectively preventing the settlement and growth of resilient multi-species consortia of biofouling organisms.

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