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Carps: A Practical Approach to Disease Control and Health Management [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: Hardback, 480 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-May-2025
  • Leidėjas: CABI Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1836990006
  • ISBN-13: 9781836990000
  • Formatas: Hardback, 480 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-May-2025
  • Leidėjas: CABI Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1836990006
  • ISBN-13: 9781836990000
The prominence of the carp group of fish is widely recognised in three important economic areas: food production, recreation and the ornamental market. Carp species thus represent over 50% of world fish production and are vital to the economic stability of several countries and global regions.It is therefore crucial that the health of these cultured aquatic species is properly considered and maintained to ensure the sustainability of production and recent disease epidemics, for example grass carp reovirus infections in China and koi herpesvirus disease in Asia and Europe, have caused widespread and devastating effects on the aquaculture industries.This book thus examines how the diseases of carp species can be properly identified, monitored, treated and prevented. It specialises on the most prominent globally occurring carp species, such as Cyprinus carpio (common carp), the Carassius species, and the carp species that predominate in Europe and Asia,such as Ctenopharygodon idellus (grass carp), Hypophthalmichthys molitrix (silver carp), and Hypophthalmichthys nobilis (bighead carp). It also looks at the more specialised production of certain species, for example Catla catla (Catla) and Labeo rohita (Roho), in the Indian subcontinent.With the continuing importance of the carp group of fish, this user-friendly book presents a practical approach to disease diagnosis and treatment that covers both infectious and non-infectious diseases. The detail included about disease, clinical signs and the application of control strategies, such as management practices, therapeutics or vaccination, is an effort to considerably improve general fish health and welfare.

The prominence of the carp group of fish is widely recognized in three important economic areas: food production, recreation and the ornamental market. Carp species thus represent over 50% of world fish production and are vital to the economic stability of several countries and global regions.

It is therefore crucial that the health of these cultured aquatic species is properly considered and maintained to ensure the sustainability of production and recent disease epidemics, for example grass carp reovirus infections in China and koi herpesvirus disease in Asia and Europe, have caused widespread and devastating effects on the aquaculture industries.

This book thus examines how the diseases of carp species can be properly identified, monitored, treated and prevented. It specializes on the most prominent globally occurring carp species, such as Cyprinus carpio (common carp), the Carassius species, and the carp species that predominate in Europe and Asia, such as Ctenopharygodon idellus (grass carp), Hypophthalmichthys molitrix (silver carp), and Hypophthalmichthys nobilis (bighead carp). It also looks at the more specialized production of certain species, for example Catla catla (Catla) and Labeo rohita (Roho), in the Indian subcontinent.

With the continuing importance of the carp group of fish, this user-friendly book presents a practical approach to disease diagnosis and treatment that covers both infectious and non-infectious diseases. The detail included about disease, clinical signs and the application of control strategies, such as management practices, therapeutics or vaccination, is an effort to considerably improve general fish health and welfare.

Daugiau informacijos

Useful for fish farm operatives and technicians, fish biologists and pathologists, veterinarians, personnel within diagnostic laboratories, zoologists, aquatic animal health specialists, environmental health inspectors, aquatic ecologists, microbiologists, virologists, parasitologists, histopathologists, students who are studying aquaculture and fish health, and the many personnel involved in supplying the aquaculture industry with pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals, feeds, and related equipment.
Part One: Introduction
Chapter 1: World carp production: economical and
societal importance
Chapter 2: Range of species and production units
Chapter
3: Getting started: the norms in biological structure and diagnostics
Chapter
4: Examination procedure, pathological terms and clinical signs
Chapter 5:
Management practices, therapeutics, and vaccines Part Two: Infectious
Diseases
Chapter 6: Viruses
Chapter 7: Fungal and fungal like pathogens
Chapter 8: Bacteria
Chapter 9: Myxozoan Diseases
Chapter 10: Protozoan
Diseases
Chapter 11: The flukes
Chapter 12: The Tapeworms (Cestoda)
Chapter
13: The Nematodes
Chapter 14: The Acanthocephala
Chapter 15: The Crustacea
Chapter 16: Leeches
Chapter 17: Coinfections Part Three: Zoonosis Part Four:
Non-infectious Diseases Part Five: An Ornamental Perspective
David Hoole (Edited By) Professor Dave Hoole, is Professor Emeritus in Fish Diseases at Keele University, UK. He has since the early 1980s undertaken extensive scientific research in carp disease and immunology. He has published widely within the scientific literature and books, and given numerous presentations to scientific and non-scientific audiences. He has also served as a director of a fish health service, which scrutinises fish health prior to consent being given for movement of fish under UK legislative requirements. He also acts as a consultant to various UK Fish Health Accreditation bodies.

Dieter Steinhagen (Edited By) Professor Dieter Steinhagen is Professor Emeritus at the Fish Disease Research Unit at the University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Germany. Since the early 1980s, he worked scientifically a various aspects of pathology and immunology of pathogen-related diseases in carp, on parasites as indicators of anthropogenic stress in ecosystems and on aspects of animal welfare in fish. This work has been funded by national and international organisation and the results have been published in articles and numerous presentations to scientific and non-scientific audiences.

Verena Jung-Schroers (Edited By) PD Dr. Verena Jung-Schroers is working at the Fish Disease Research Unit of the University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Germany, since 2005 and is heading the institute since 2021. She is a specialised fish veterinarian and diplomate of the European Colleges of Aquatic Animal Health and is responsible for the further training of veterinarians in the field of fish diseases. In research projects she works on bacterial infections in fish and other aquatic animals, on the importance of the microbiome in aquaculture systems and on animal welfare. She has published the results of these and other studies in numerous articles and presentations.

Mikolaj Adamek (Edited By) Dr Mikolaj Adamek is a Research Associate and Principal Investigator at the Fish Disease Research Unit of the University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Germany. Since the mid-2000s he has been working on various aspects of immunology, pathophysiology and diagnostics of pathogen-related diseases in carps, salmonids and tilapia. He works mainly with viral pathogens, looking for prevention and treatment measures that could lead to a reduction in the impact of the disease on fish welfare. His research is funded by national and international sources. The results have been reported in numerous scientific and non-scientific articles and presentations.