This would have great applications across aquacultured and ornamental pet fishes where eradication is not always possible for reasons as being in an extensive culture situation or where you are rearing fish in open water situations. Worth a look into.
Garlic is used as an appetite stimulant and has immunostimulatory properties too. Just need to add at quantities depending on species and what it’s for.
… and in the movies, it’ll keep away vampires! Which can be thought of as blood sucking parasites!
| Aquaculture | |||||||||||||||||
| Volume 409, Number 1-2 (September 2013) | |||||||||||||||||
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Dietary supplementation of garlic (Allium sativum) to prevent monogenean infection in aquaculture | ||||||||||||||||
| Authors: | Thane A. Militz, Paul C. Southgate, Alexander G. Carton, Kate S. Hutson | ||||||||||||||||
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| Source: | Aquaculture, Volume 409, Number 1-2 (September 2013) | ||||||||||||||||
| Page Numbers: | 95 – 99 | ||||||||||||||||
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| Abstract: | Development of an effective preventative treatment for managing infections by Monogenea (Platyhelminthes) in aquaculture remains elusive. Present treatment methods offer only temporary respite and are either labor intensive, harmful to fish welfare or environmentally destructive. This study used garlic (Allium sativum) supplemented feed to assess its potential, in relation to its allicin content (an active component of garlic), to prevent infection by Neobenedeniasp. (Monogenea: Capsalidae) on farmed barramundi, Lates calcarifer. Two garlic supplemented diets of different concentrations and a non-supplemented control diet were fed to L. calcariferfor 10 and 30days prior to challenging fish with Neobenedeniasp. Long-term (30days) supplementation with garlic significantly reduced infection success by up to 70% compared to controls and did not negatively affect palatability of the feed. Infection success was not influenced by short-term (10days) supplementation suggesting that a delayed host response must occur to improve resistance to infection. Incorporation of garlic into a pressure-extruded pellet was found to be an effective method of delivery as only minimal leaching of allicin from the diet occurred (<3% of allicin detected) during the interval of water contact between delivery and consumption. This study demonstrates that garlic extract administered as a dietary supplement is one of the most practical methods to prevent Neobenedeniasp. infection in mariculture. | ||||||||||||||||
| Citation: | Thane A. Militz, Paul C. Southgate, Alexander G. Carton, Kate S. Hutson . Dietary supplementation of garlic (Allium sativum) to prevent monogenean infection in aquaculture. Aquaculture, Volume 409, Numbers 1-2 (September 2013), pp. 95-99, <http://ejournals.ebsco.com/direct.asp?ArticleID=4B6A87E8530AFD9EB166> | ||||||||||||||||
| URL: | http://ejournals.ebsco.com/direct.asp?ArticleID=4B6A87E8530AFD9EB166 | ||||||||||||||||