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Kate S. Hutson
Researcher at James Cook University
Publications - 66
Citations - 1393
Kate S. Hutson is an academic researcher from James Cook University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aquaculture & Neobenedenia. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 57 publications receiving 1026 citations. Previous affiliations of Kate S. Hutson include Cawthron Institute & University of Adelaide.
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Cleaner fishes and shrimp diversity and a re-evaluation of cleaning symbioses
TL;DR: Cleaning symbiosis as originally defined is amended to highlight communication between client and cleaner as the catalyst for cooperation and to separate cleaning symbiosis from incidental cleaning, which is a separate mutualism preceded by no communication.
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Risk assessment for metazoan parasites of yellowtail kingfish Seriola lalandi (Perciformes: Carangidae) in South Australian sea-cage aquaculture
TL;DR: A qualitative risk assessment for 57 metazoan parasite species found to infect wild yellowtail kingfish and Samson fish in southern Australia is performed to determine real risks to local sea-cage aquaculture of S. lalandi in South Australia and for industry expansion elswhere.
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Coral propagation: a review of techniques for ornamental trade and reef restoration
TL;DR: This review provides a comprehensive synthesis of recent developments in aquaculture propagation techniques for the purpose of ornamental trade and coral reef restoration, including asexual and sexual propagation, nursery and transplantation stages.
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Parasite detection in the ornamental fish trade using environmental DNA
TL;DR: Screening for parasite eDNA within ornamental fish consignments should be tested during pre-export quarantine periods to avoid false positive detections at border control, according to a four-step predictive framework.
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Dietary supplementation of garlic (Allium sativum) to prevent monogenean infection in aquaculture
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that garlic extract administered as a dietary supplement is one of the most practical methods to prevent Neobenedenia sp.