Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Reverter M., Sarter S., Caruso Domenico, Avarre Jean-Christophe, Combe Marine, Pepey E., Pouyaud Laurent, Vega-Heredia S., de Verdal H., Gozlan Rodolphe. (2020). Aquaculture at the crossroads of global warming and antimicrobial resistance. Nature Communications, 11 (1), 1870 [8 p.]. ISSN 2041-1723.

Titre du document
Aquaculture at the crossroads of global warming and antimicrobial resistance
Année de publication
2020
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000558827500005
Auteurs
Reverter M., Sarter S., Caruso Domenico, Avarre Jean-Christophe, Combe Marine, Pepey E., Pouyaud Laurent, Vega-Heredia S., de Verdal H., Gozlan Rodolphe
Source
Nature Communications, 2020, 11 (1), 1870 [8 p.] ISSN 2041-1723
In many developing countries, aquaculture is key to ensuring food security for millions of people. It is thus important to measure the full implications of environmental changes on the sustainability of aquaculture. We conduct a double meta-analysis (460 articles) to explore how global warming and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) impact aquaculture. We calculate a Multi-Antibiotic Resistance index (MAR) of aquaculture-related bacteria (11,274 isolates) for 40 countries, of which mostly low- and middle-income countries present high AMR levels. Here we show that aquaculture MAR indices correlate with MAR indices from human clinical bacteria, temperature and countries' climate vulnerability. We also find that infected aquatic animals present higher mortalities at warmer temperatures. Countries most vulnerable to climate change will probably face the highest AMR risks, impacting human health beyond the aquaculture sector, highlighting the need for urgent action. Sustainable solutions to minimise antibiotic use and increase system resilience are therefore needed. Global environmental changes threaten many food-producing sectors, including aquaculture. Here the authors show that countries most vulnerable to climate change will probably face the highest antimicrobial resistance in aquaculture-related bacteria, and that infected aquatic animals have higher mortality at warmer temperatures.
Plan de classement
Sciences du milieu [021] ; Ressources halieutiques [040] ; Biotechnologies [084]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010079530]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010079530
Contact