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  • Unveiling the economic burden of diseases in aquatic animal food production in India

    Economic burden of diseases on Indian aquaculture sector was estimated to be US$ 2.48 B, 14.95% of annual aquaculture production value. Analysis revealed a higher cost of disease (US$ t−1) in shrimp (1,224.82) followed by marine fish (815.87), IMC+ (364.89), tilapia (260.34), IMC (200.70), and pangasius (pond 198.92; cage 168.36). The major contributors to the disease burden included production loss (23.90%), expenses on prophylactics (50.31%) and therapeutics (17.26%). The economic loss was dominated by diseases of multiple etiology (US$ 468.27 M), bacterial hemorrhagic septicemia (US$ 326.47 M), and epizootic ulcerative syndrome (US$ 88.12 M) in finfish and by Enterocytozoon hepatopenaei infection (US$ 571.24 M) in shrimp. Multinomial logit regression identified farm size, water source and exchange, stocking biomass and feed type as the main determinants of disease. The study findings would assist in prioritizing resource allocation and developing intervention strategies at the national level for effective and targeted disease management.

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  • Transcriptomic footprint of Mytella strigata: de novo transcriptome assembly of a major invasive species
  • Discovery of a new species of troglobitic eel loach from southern India
  • Reproductive biology of largehead cutlassfish Trichiurus lepturus Linnaeus 1758 along eastern Arabian Sea and western Bay of Bengal
  • Sulfated exopolysaccharide from Bacillus altitudinis MTCC13046 accelerates cutaneous wound healing via dermal fibroblast migration: Insights into an in vivo wound re-epithelialization
  • Morphometrics, Length-Weight Relationships and Relative Condition Factor Inportunus Sanguinolentus (Herbst, 1783) from Southeastern Arabian Sea
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