Tarpaulin bath treatments are used in open net-pen finfish aquaculture to combat parasitic infections, in particular sea lice. After treatment, the toxic wastewater is released directly into the ocean, potentially harming non-target species in the vicinity. We model the dispersion of wastewater chemicals using a high-resolution numerical ocean model. The results are used to estimate the impact area, impact range, dissolution time, and exposure probability for chemicals of arbitrary toxicity. The study area is a fish-farming intensive region on the Norwegian western coast. Simulations are performed at 61 different release dates, each on 16 locations. In our base case where the chemical is toxic at 1% of the treatment concentration, the release of a 16000 m3; wastewater plume traverses a median distance of 1.9 km before being completely dissolved. The median impacted area is 0.9 km2; and the median dissolution time is 6.8 hours. These figures increase to 5.9 km, 7.0 km2;, and 21 hours, respectively, if the chemical is toxic at 0.1 % of the treatment concentration. Locations within fjords have slower dissolution rates and larger impact zones compared to exposed locations off the coast, especially during summer.
CITATION STYLE
Sævik, P. N., Agnalt, A. L., Samuelsen, O. B., & Myksvoll, M. (2022). Modelling chemical releases from fish farms: Impact zones, dissolution time, and exposure probability. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 79(1), 22–33. https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsab224
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