Anaesthesia of laboratory, aquaculture and ornamental fish: Proceedings of the first LASA-FVS Symposium

Author:

Schroeder Paul1,Lloyd Richard2,McKimm Robin3,Metselaar Matthijs4,Navarro Jorge5,O’Farrell Martin6ORCID,Readman Gareth D.7,Speilberg Lars8,Mocho Jean-Philippe9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Services, University of Oxford, UK

2. Centre for Sustainable Aquatic Research, Swansea University, UK

3. Electrofishing Services Ltd, UK

4. Benchmark Animal Health Ltd, UK

5. PHARMAQ, UK

6. Aztec Management Consultants, Ireland

7. Conservation Welfare and Engagement Department, SEA LIFE, UK

8. Scanvacc AS, Norway

9. Joint Production System Ltd, UK

Abstract

Following on from the Annual Fish Veterinary Society Conference, this symposium was organised with the Laboratory Animal Science Association and brought together experts from ornamental (pond and aquarium) fish practice, aquaculture and aquatic-research facilities to discuss good practice of anaesthesia. This proceedings paper gives an overview of relevant experiences involving a range of immersion drugs including tricaine, benzocaine and isoeugenol, as well as a summary of the main topics of discussion. While fish anaesthesia is commonplace, administration methods, drugs and monitoring procedures may often be regarded as antiquated when compared with mammalian practice. These limitations notwithstanding, individual fish will benefit from good anaesthetic monitoring. Although the most common anaesthetic drugs may be perceived as equally efficacious and therefore interchangeable for different settings, challenges are different for the anaesthesia of grouped fish, when determining species-dependent anaesthetic dosing in a multi-species tank, or adapting to farming requirements, nationally licensed products, costs and withdrawal periods. The fish anaesthetic arsenal fails to address premedication, analgesia and issues of averseness. The two latter factors should be part of the evaluation of anaesthetic protocols; therefore, instructions for the analgesic provision of lidocaine to fin clipped zebrafish are proposed. Euthanasia practices could sometimes be refined too. Alternative physical methods such as electrical stunning are options to be considered.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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