Antimicrobial use in aquaculture re‐examined: its relevance to antimicrobial resistance and to animal and human health
New York Medical College · Austral University of Chile · +1 more institution
Abstract
The worldwide growth of aquaculture has been accompanied by a rapid increase in therapeutic and prophylactic usage of antimicrobials including those important in human therapeutics. Approximately 80% of antimicrobials used in aquaculture enter the environment with their activity intact where they select for bacteria whose resistance arises from mutations or more importantly, from mobile genetic elements containing multiple resistance determinants transmissible to other bacteria. Such selection alters biodiversity in aquatic environments and the normal flora of fish and shellfish. The commonality of the mobilome (the total of all mobile genetic elements in a genome) between aquatic and terrestrial bacteria…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.59
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 356
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Aquaculture
- Antimicrobial
- Antibiotic resistance
- Mobile genetic elements
- Bacteria
- Aquatic ecosystem
- Microbiology