Ireland: Can probiotics improve Pacific oyster production?

Published Mar 26, 2021

Tridge summary

Researchers at NOAA’s Milford Laboratory have discovered a beneficial strain of Vibrio alginolyticus, named OY15, which when used as a probiotic can improve survival and disease resistance of eastern oyster larvae by 20-35 percent. This method is an alternative to the repeated use of antibiotics and is environmentally friendly. The research is being supported by a 2021 ICAF grant and will be extended to Pacific oysters. The probiotic is being supplied by Prospective Research, a company founded by participants of Ireland’s first Aquaculture Accelerator program.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Bacterial disease in commercial oyster hatcheries is a major cause of larval mortalities, a major constraint in oyster production. Environmentally-friendly methods for controlling microbial pathogenesis with probiotic bacteria are becoming increasingly preferred over repeated use of antibiotics, which can select for resistant pathogens in the environment. NOAA’s Milford Laboratory in Connecticut has discovered and developed a benign strain of Vibrio alginolyticus isolated from the digestive glands of oysters, to manage bacterial shellfish pathogens in commercial hatcheries and improve larval survival of the eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica). Their research has shown that adding the probiotic, called OY15, every other day as a supplement to their algal feed can improve survival and disease resistance of eastern oyster larvae by 20-35 percent when challenged with a known shellfish pathogen. NOAA’s Milford Laboratory recently secured a 2021 ICAF grant to allow hatchery-scale ...
Source: Thefishsite

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