554 results

People development program: Aquatic animal health training scheme - Dr Susan Kueh

Project number: 2009-315.19
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $9,167.69
Principal Investigator: Susan Gibson-Kueh
Organisation: Murdoch University
Project start/end date: 28 Aug 2011 - 14 Dec 2021
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Western Australia has a great potential for increased aquaculture activities. According to the Aquaculture Council of WA, the main concern of her members has been lack of easy access to fish health veterinary services. Disease is a major limiting factor in aquaculture of both established as well as potentially important aquaculture fish species in WA, e.g. barramundi, kingfish. Aquaculture will provide an alternate source of food fish amidst reports of declining wild fish stocks. There is the potential of further growing an industry that will provide jobs directly as well as indirectly in downstream activities in seafood processing.

Histopathology has been recognized as an invaluable tool in fish disease diagnosis. The Australian College of Veterinary Scientists recently added aquatic animal health as a new fellowship program in 2010 and there is currently only one person enrolled. This program involves a very intensive professional training program with approved experts amounting to 25 hours a week over 154 weeks, and attendance at relevant workshops and conferences, which will need dedicated funding. This endeavour will not only benefit the local aquaculture industry directly by making available a specialist fish health veterinarian, but also provide better trained veterinarians and farm staff through her teaching activities at the tertiary and postgraduate levels. PI's research into significant diseases in collaboration with her colleagues at Murdoch University and Fish Health Laboratory, Dept. of Fisheries WA will also benefit the industry via better understanding of disease and control strategies.

Objectives

1. Professional development of PI via membership & fellowship program with the Australian College of Veterinary Scientists in aquatic animal health in particular, fish pathobiology
2. Development of PI in the delivery of veterinary disease diagnostic services to aquaculturists in WA and Australia
3. PI's fish disease research activities will create a better understanding of significant diseases in aquaculture
4. Dissemination of knowledge via PI participation in tertiary & postgraduate training of veterinarians, farm managers & operational staff, publications in journals, presentations at conferences and production of digitized slide DVDs on fish disease

People development program: scholarship program for enhancing the skills of aquatic animal health professionals in Australia

Project number: 2009-315
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Principal Investigator: Jo-Anne Ruscoe
Organisation: Fisheries Research and Development Corporation (FRDC)
Project start/end date: 12 May 2009 - 29 Jun 2012
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Australia requires an effective system of aquatic animal health management to support Australia’s aquatic animal industries (e.g. aquaculture and fisheries, including the aquarium sector) and to protect Australia’s aquatic ecosystems and fauna. To be effective, the system needs well-trained and competent aquatic animal health professionals (including industry) with skill sets across a range of specialist disciplines and an understanding of their disciplines in an industry context. Professionals in this context refers to people working in the field of aquatic animal health including industry.

Objectives

1. To establish a scholarship program to support the development of aquatic animal health professionals

People development program: Aquatic animal health training scheme - Boosting biosecurity capability in Western Australia

Project number: 2009-315.16
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $38,000.00
Principal Investigator: Susan Gibson-Kueh
Organisation: Aquaculture Council Of Western Australia Inc
Project start/end date: 31 Jul 2011 - 29 Aug 2012
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Aquaculture health and biosecurity are complex multidisciplinary areas that require specialized human resource development (van Beek 1997). There is a wealth of lessons to be learnt from more established aquaculture industries. As each industry is unique in fish species farmed and local environmental issues, there is a need to process information into a practical biosecurity plan.

The Western Australian aquaculture industry is regionalized, with large distances between centres of activity. Ready access to veterinarians with expertise in fish and shellfish is rare, often resulting in heavy losses. There is a need to
increase/consolidate knowledge amongst fish farm managers & operational staff in aquaculture health. Involving local veterinarians will improve access to fish health services. The workshops will create greater networking allowing fish farm managers and their local veterinarians the small pool of veterinarians within Fisheries and Universities with experience in fish and shellfish health

The above need is consistent with WA industry's RDE priorities, FRDC's environmental program theme 1

Objectives

1. Develop & run 2-day workshops on biosecurity, aquaculture health and emergency response targeted at fish farm managers, key operational staff and their local veterinarians, to critically review current operations using available information, identify gaps and develop a biosecurity action plan for future improvements
2. To further develop the technical network using the plan developed to improve fish health and biosecurity on farm
3. Run 1 day follow-up workshop, six months after final 1st workshop to review progress and decide what, how to go from here.
4. Publish online biosecurity tool kit for the australian aquaculture industry

Final report

Seafood CRC: Centre of Excellence Science Seafood & Health (CESSH): Post Harvest Research Program

Project number: 2013-711
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $412,202.00
Principal Investigator: Jayne M. Gallagher
Organisation: Curtin University
Project start/end date: 14 Jun 2013 - 29 Jun 2016
Contact:
FRDC

Need

The seafood industry is facing unprecedented challenges (WAFIC 2020 Strategy, FRDC R&D 2015). The networks established by CESSH have laid a strong foundation to attract national and international investment partners. For the first time, the whole industry along the supply chain and post harvest is working together to achieve outcomes that benefit the WA (and national seafood industry) and the health of the Australian population. It is essential that the industry is able to remain viable and indeed grow, within the constraints of an ever changing economic, technological and food security landscape. There is a need for a continued go-to place that the industry can access to gain support to develop new products, investigate novel and improved means of harvest, reduce production costs and provide evidence of the value of consuming seafood. CESSH needs to build on existing strong capacity areas and establish expertise in areas that are currently not available in WA to service the growing and diverse needs of industry. This could afford industry a point of difference in the provision of world class support to answer research and science questions that impact on growth, quality or profitability in a timely fashion, an essential service for a primary industry.

Objectives

1. Sub Program 1: Waste minimisation and management - optimisation of supply chains to reduce waste
total utilisation of seafood products
and innovative product development from under-utilised species
2. Sub Program 2: Retailer 2020 - Develop an understanding of multi-channel consumer retail environments (current and future trends) to support Australian businesses to capitalise on new and emerging oppoprtunities.
3. Sub Program 3: Food policy research - maintain currency of expertise and knowledge in: regulation of food labelling and food laws
nutrition and health claims
nutritional dietary guidelines and the human health benefits of seafood to inform industry marketing initiatives and nutritional claims
4. Sub Program 4: Research advisory service - Develop a technical advice service to provide assistance along the supply chain
assist and upskill industry to apply for research funds
provide food technology advice (e.g. nutritional composition)
provide health benefit advice to industry (market advantage)
and develop tailored industry and consumer resources.
5. Sub Program 5 - Education, communication and extension - respond to industry post harvest training needs
inform industry of relevant research findings in a variety of formats appropriate to the end-users
and build post harvest research and scientific capacity that is imbedded within the industry.
6. Sub Program 6 - Collaborative manufacturing hub - investigate and trial collaborative manufacturing hubs to reduce costs and maximise efficiencies in developing and commercialising new products

Final report

Author: Professor Alexandra McManus and Dr Janet Howieson
Final Report • 2019-01-01 • 863.24 KB
2013-711-DLD.pdf

Summary

This report summarises the outputs of Sub-Programs 2-5 of FRDC 2013-711: Centre of Excellence for Science, Seafood and Health. The report focuses on the period between January 2013 and June 2015 after which time the Sub-programs were ceased. The Sub-programs were entitled: Retailer 2020, Food
Policy Research, Research Advisory Service and Education, Communication and Extension. However, in reviewing the research, many of the outputs were common to several of the programs so will be reported in this way rather than under each sub-program.
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2012-737
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Seafood CRC: yellowtail kingfish health workshop and feed analysis

This project addressed the need to further CST's understanding of the disease issues severely impacting YTK production. It also provided an environment to share ideas and peer review CST's approach to dealing with the outlined case history and its proposed remedial strategies and R&D activities....
ORGANISATION:
Clean Seas Seafood Ltd

An investigation of the toxicity of fish containing mercury at concentrations in excess of present health regulations

Project number: 1981-007
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Organisation: University of Queensland (UQ)
Project start/end date: 27 Jun 1985 - 29 Jun 1985
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Does eating fish such as shark & gemfish from unpolluted waters, containing mercury in excess of health regulations, pose danger of intoxication?
2. If not, investigate if any resistance to methyl mercury is conferred by ingesting such fish.
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