R. Coyne et al., TRANSIENT PRESENCE OF OXYTETRACYCLINE IN BLUE MUSSELS (MYTILUS-EDULIS) FOLLOWING ITS THERAPEUTIC USE AT A MARINE ATLANTIC SALMON FARM, Aquaculture, 149(3-4), 1997, pp. 175-181
On 15 occasions, during and after a therapeutic treatment of fish in a
n Atlantic salmon farm, oxytetracycline concentrations were determined
in samples of blue mussels collected at two sites in the vicinity of
the farm. Oxytetracycline was not detected in any samples of mussels c
ollected 20 m from the cage black at a depth of 1 m. Those mussels sam
pled from immediately under one cage (Cage 65) at the farm (10-11 m de
pth) contained a concentration of 10.2 mu g oxytetracycline g(-1) of s
oft tissue on the last day of treatment. After the end of oxytetracycl
ine administration the concentration detected in these samples decline
d exponentially (r(2) = 0.94) with a half-life of approximately 2 days
. At the time of the treatment the farm was stocked with 144 tonnes of
fish and 186 kg of oxytetracycline were administered during a ten day
treatment. In muscle samples taken from fish (n = 5) in Cage 65, afte
r 8 days of therapy the mean oxytetracycline concentration was 1.3 +/-
0.9 mu g g(-1). Three days after the end of the therapy the top 2 cm
of the sediments beneath Cage 65 contained 9.9 +/- 2.9 mu g g(-1) (n =
5). These tissue and sediment concentrations lie within the ranges of
values that have previously been reported for such treatments. It is
argued that residues present in filter feeding bivalves that occur as
a consequence of the therapeutic use of oxytetracycline in marine fish
farms are unlikely to present a significant human health hazard. (C)
1997 Elsevier Science B.V.