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15 - 20 July Pullman Hotel, Cairns, Australia www.jcu.edu.au/isga ISGA XIII International Symposium of Genetics in Aquaculture Conference Program 2018

Conference Program 2018 - jcu.edu.au · Jarrod Guppy. PhD Candidate. James Cook University, Australia. Melissa Joyce. Administration Officer. James Cook University, Australia. Roger

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15 - 20 July Pullman Hotel, Cairns, Australia

www.jcu.edu.au/isga

ISGA XIII International Symposium of

Genetics in Aquaculture

Conference Program2018

2018 ISGA XIII 2

Welcome 3 Social Program 24

About ISGA 4 Poster Displays 26

Conference Committee 5 Biographies 37

General Information 7 Sponsors 39

Conference Program 11 List of Participants 41

CONTENTS

Cairns Lagoon

2018 ISGA XIII 3

Welcome to ISGA XIII

Dear Delegates and Guests,

On behalf of the local organizing committee and James Cook University, the hosting institution, it is my

pleasure to welcome you to the 13th International Symposium for Genetics in Aquaculture in beautiful

Cairns.

ISGA XIII will carry on the proud tradition of bringing together researchers, industry, service providers and

students, who all have the same goal of applying genetic technologies to the improvement and

sustainable management of aquaculture species. It will highlight advances in our understanding of the

genetics of both tropical and temperate farmed fish, crustaceans and molluscs.

Although it is only 3 years since the last Symposium held in Santiago de Compostela, the field of genetics

has rapidly advanced with genomic technologies becoming more powerful, affordable and accessible,

targeted gene editing has become a reality, increased insights into the role epigenetics plays in sex

determination, disease and nutrition have been shown, and development of the complex new field of

microbiomics has become part of aquaculture research. It is exciting times indeed ahead for aquaculture

and the role genetics will play in ensuring the sector fulfils its prophecy of significantly contributing

towards future food security.

To pull together an event of this magnitude is no small feat. I thank all those who have worked with me to

make the event possible. In particular, I’d like to acknowledge the hard work of Kristin Nunn and the local

Organizing Committee, the Scientific Committee, the plenary and keynote speakers, and of course the

generous financial support of sponsors. Lastly, I’d like to thank all the delegates for your attendance and

contributions which are the foundation of this Symposium.

Enjoy your time in beautiful North Queensland and I hope that the Symposium is a productive meeting

where you learn a lot and kindle both new and old friendships.

Enjoy paradise!

Dean JerryChair, Australia

2018 ISGA XIII 4

The International Association for Genetics in Aquaculture (IAGA) was formed at the 1985

Symposium Genetics in Aquaculture II, in Davis, USA, with the purpose to promote

communication and constructive service to its members concerning all aspects of genetics of

aquatic species important to aquaculture, to provide a mechanism for holding a triennial

meeting known as the “International Symposium on Genetics in Aquaculture (ISGA)”, and

ensuring the publication of the proceedings of each symposium.

ABOUT ISGA

Past Conferences

2015: XII Santiago de Compostela (ES)2012: XI Auburn (US)2009: X Bangkok (TH)2006: IX Montpellier (FR)2003: VIII Puerto Varas (CL)2000: VII Townsville (AU)

1997: VI Stirling (UK)1994: V Halifax (CA)1991: IV Wuhan (CN)1988: III Trondheim (NO)1985: II Davis (US)1982: I Galway (IE)

Prof Dean JerryConference ChairDirector ARC Research Hub for Advanced Prawn BreedingJames Cook University, Australia

Prof. Alexander HilsorfUMC Universidade

Prof Paulino Martínez PortelaProfessor of Genetics,University of Santiago de Compostela, Spain

Prof. Uthairat Na-NakornDirector of Kasetart University Research and Development Institute,Kasetsart University, Thailand

Prof Francesc PiferrerResearch Professor at the Institute of Marine Sciences (ICM), Spain

Dr Nick RobinsonSenior Scientist – Nofima, NorwayAssociate Professor - The University of Melbourne, Australia

Assoc. Prof Rouvay Roodt-WildingAssociate Professor,Stellenbosch UniversitySouth Africa

Dr Morten RyeManaging Director, AkvaforskGenetics, Norway

Prof Liang XufangAssociate Dean of Research, Huazhong Agricultural University, China

Prof Zhanjiang LiuVice President for ResearchOffice of ResearchProfessor of BiologySyracuse University, USA

2018 ISGA XIII 5

SCIENTIFICCOMMITTEE

Prof Dean JerryConference ChairDirector ARC Research Hub for Advanced Prawn BreedingJames Cook University, Australia

Jarrod GuppyPhD CandidateJames Cook University, Australia

Melissa JoyceAdministration OfficerJames Cook University, Australia

Roger HuerlimannResearch FellowJames Cook University, Australia

Kristin Nunn Research Project OfficerJames Cook University, Australia

Maria NayfaPhD CandidateJames Cook University, Australia

Dr Jan StrugnellAssociate ProfessorJames Cook University, Australia

Agnes le PortResearch FellowJames Cook University, Australia

2018 ISGA XIII 6

ORGANISINGCOMMITTEE

2018 ISGA XIII 7

Emergency DetailsIn an emergency dial 000 for Ambulance, Fire Service or Police.

Non-emergency medical situations call 13 12 33.

Please advise conference or venue personnel in such events.

SmokingSmoking is not permitted indoors. Smokers must remain at least 5 m from any doorway when smoking. Fines can be imposed for smoking in prohibited places.

Smart casual / business attire dress code applies for conference sessions and the conference dinner.

For Friday sessions delegates are encouraged to dress in tropical attire for “Tropical Friday”.

Dress Code

Opening Times + RegistrationRegistration Desk opens the following times:• Sunday 15 July at 4:30pm – 6:30pm• Monday 16 July at 7:00am – 9:00am

Conference Sessions will begin at 8:45am

Wi-Fi AccessPullman offer Wi-Fi to their guests. The password is NEMO18

Car ParkingValet parking is available at the Pullman for $22.00 per day.

Off-street car parking is also available throughout the Cairns CBD.

If you have any queries relating to youraccommodation booking first speak to the staff at your hotel.

Your credit card details were supplied tothe hotel you have selected, as security for your booking. If you have arrived 24 hours later than your indicated arrival day you may find that you have been charged a fee. You will be responsible for all room and incidental charges on check out and may be asked for an impression of your credit card for security against these charges. This is standard policy in many hotels

Accommodation

GENERAL INFORMATION

2018 ISGA XIII 8

Please be advised that each presenter has a total time of 15 minutes (12 minutes presentation and 3 minutes for questions) unless advised otherwise. Do not exceed the allocated time for your presentation.

You must deliver a digital copy of your presentation to the Registration Desk no later than 0800am the day of your presentation, unless otherwise advised. Ensure that your file is saved with your unique ID which can be found in the confirmation of presentation email or on the website.

Arrive at the "Agincourt" room before the session begins and contact the session convener for last-minute instructions or changes in the schedule. An audio visual control engineer will operate the slides.

PowerPoint (.pptx) software is preferred in the 16:9 aspect ratio. Please ensure your slides and content can be seen clearly from a distance of at least 20 meters. A remote laser pointer and clicker and comfort monitor will be provided. You will have a choice of a lectern or lapel mic.

Speakers / Oral Presentations

The tour day is scheduled for Thursday 19th July. A private coach will depart the Pullman at 11:30am.

See page 25 for more information.

Tour Day

Please report to the "Tully Rooms" Sunday 15/07/2018 or Monday 16/07/2018. You will receive instructions about where to hang your poster. Please reference your unique code when registering. Posters must be a maximum of A0 sizing- 841mm X 1189mm-vertical/portrait only. Posters will be displayed throughout the conference. It is expected that presenter/s should be available at the poster during the conference breaks (morning and afternoon tea breaks as per the schedule) in order to give an overview of their poster to conference delegates. We will hold a dedicated poster session on Tuesday 17th May 2018 after the sessions conclude for the day.

Poster Presentations

ISGA conference has a web-based app which can be accessed by visiting:

https://cumulusapp.com

Event Key: isga2018

The app allows you to receive push notifications, access links and downloads and keep up-to-date with the conference schedule.

Conference Web-Based App

All Abstracts are available as PDFs on the ISGA website.

Each presentation has a code at the end of their title, for example the first presentation for Genomic Prediction is GP1, second is GP2 etc.

Conference Material

GENERAL INFORMATION

2018 ISGA XIII 9

Grand Ballroom

Tully Rooms 1, 2, 3(Poster Display)

Foyer & Exhibitors

Hotel Reception

GENERAL INFORMATION

2018 ISGA XIII 10

Cairns CBD

2

1) Pullman Hotel2) Aqualuna @ Cairns Aquarium3) Cairns Lagoon 4) Restaurant and Eateries Precinct

1

3

4

GENERAL INFORMATION

2018 ISGA XIII 11

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM

SUNDAY 15 JULY 2018 Conference Program

MONDAY 16 JULY 2018

1630– 1830 Registration Desk Opens + Poster Setup Ballroom Foyer Tully Rooms 1, 2 & 3

1830 – 2030 Welcome FunctionPullman - Daintree’s Pooldeck

0700- Registration Desk OpensBallroom Foyer

0700-0900 Poster Set-upTully Rooms 1,2 & 3

0830-0900 Welcoming CeremonyGrand Ballroom

Henrietta Marrie AM - Welcome to Country Warren Entsch MP, Federal Member for Leichardt - Opening Delegate

0900-0930 Conference PlenaryGene editing by CRISPR as a research tool and possible applications in aquaculture.

Dr Lene KleppeInstitute of Marine Research, Norway

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND FUNCTIONAL GENOMICSSession Chair: Prof Zhanjiang (John) Liu

0930-0945 UNDERSTANDING GENETIC RESISTANCE TO VIRAL INFECTION IN ATLANTIC SALMON USING PRIMARY AND IMMORTILISED CELL CULTURE MODELS. (BFG1)

Remi GratacapRoslin Institute, UK

0945-1000 NEXT GENERATION SEQUENCING AND QUANTIFICATION OF MAJOR HISTOCOMPATIBILITY COMPLEX GENOTYPES ENABLES SEMI-QUANTITATIVE EVALUATION OF GERM CELL TRANSPLANTATION EFFICACY IN JAPANESE FLOUNDER (BFG2)

Jun KawaiRIKEN, Japan

1000-1015 THE MYSTIFYING DIVERSITY OF IMMUNOGLOBULIN M HEAVY CHAIN GENES AND ITS REPERTOIRES IN BIGHEAD CATFISH (CLARIAS MACROCEPHALUS) (BFG3)

Prapansak SrisapoomeKasetsart University, Thailand

1015-1030 THE OSSIFICATION MODE AND GENETIC REGULATION OF INTERMUSCULAR BONES IN TELEOST (BFG4)

Zexia GaoHuazhong Agricultural University, China

1030-1045 CORTISOL ACTING THROUGH THE GLUCOCORTICOID RECEPTOR IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR EXERCISE-ENHANCED GROWTH BUT DOES AFFECT THE WHITE SKELETAL MUSCLE TRANSCRIPTOME (BFG5)

Arjan PalstraWageningen University, Netherlands

2018 ISGA XIII 12

MONDAY 16 JULY 2018 Conference Program

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND FUNCTIONAL GENOMICS cont’

1045-1100 GENE EDITING OF CANDIDATE GENE FOR PARASITE DISEASE RESISTANCE IN YELLOWTAIL SERIOLA QUINQUERADIATA AND ARTIFICIAL INFECTION TEST OF BENEDENIA SERIOLAE (BFG6)

Hiroyuki OkamotoNRIA/ FRA, Japan

Morning tea – 30 mins

1130-1145 UNDERSTANDING THE MACRO- AND MICRO-EVOLUTION OF BIVALVES: INSIGHTS FROM TWO SCALLOP GENOMES (BFG7)

Shi WangOcean University of China, China

1145-1200 APPLICATION OF GENOME EDITING IN AQUACULTURE (BFG8)

Gen Hua YueTemasek Life Sciences Laboratory, National University of Singapore and Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

1200-1215 DE NOVO ASSEMBLY, CHARACTERIZATION, FUNCTIONAL ANNOTATION AND EXPRESSION PATTERNS OF THE BLACK TIGER SHRIMP (PENAEUS MONODON) TRANSCRIPTOME (BFG9)

Roger HuerlimannJames Cook University, Australia

Lunch – 60 minutes

SEX CONTROLSession Chair: Prof Francesc Piferrer

1315-1330 GENETIC ARCHITECTURE OF SEX DETERMINATION IN TURBOT (SCOPHTHALMUS MAXIMUS) (SC1)

Paulino MartinezUniversidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain

1330-1345 THE FIRST NON-MAMMALIAN Y CHROMOSOME SEQUENCE REVEALS BCAR1 AS THE CANDIDATE SEX DETERMINATION GENE IN CHANNEL CATFISH (SC2)

John LiuSyracuse University, USA

1345-14:00 EVIDENCE FOR MULTIPLE MECHANISMS CAPABLE OF CONFERRING MALENESS IN ATLANTIC SALMON (SC3)

James KijasCSIRO, Australia

1400-1415 GENETIC ARCHITECTURE OF SEX REVERSAL IN HALF-SMOOTH TONGUE SOLE (CYNOGLOSSUS SEMILAEVIS) (SC4)

Hengde LiChinese Academy of Fishery Sciences, China

2018 ISGA XIII 13

MONDAY 16 JULY 2018 Conference Program

SEX CONTROL cont'

1415-1430 MOLECULAR ANALYSIS OF HEAT-INDUCED MASCULINIZATION IN TELEOST (SC5)

Woei Chang LiewTemasek Life Sciences Laboratory, Singapore

1430-1445 MASS PRODUCTION OF ALL FEMALE YELLOW DRUM (NIBEA ALBIFLORA) USING SEX CONTROL (SC6)

Dongdong XuZhejiang Ocean University, China

Afternoon Tea – 30 Minutes

1515-1530 THE NATIONAL BREEDING PROGRAM OF SERIOLA LALANDI FOR DIVERSIFYING THE CHILEAN AQUACULTURE AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF GENOMIC RESOURCES (SC7)

Victor MartinezUniversity of Chile, Chile

1530-1545 SEX CONTROL IN LOBSTERS AND PRAWNS – LESSONS LEARNT AND THE ROAD AHEAD (SC8)

Tomer VenturaUniversity of the Sunshine Coast, Australia

1545-1600 A TRANS-SPECIES SNP IN A STEROIDOGENIC GENE IS ASSOCIATED WITH SEX DETERMINATION IN SERIOLA SPECIES (SC9)

Kiyoshi KikuchiUniversity of Tokyo, Japan

1600-1615 BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR ALL-FEMALE PRAWNS- FIRST TIME IN CRUSTACEAN AQUACULTURE (SC10)

Tom LevyBen-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

1615-1630 QTL RESULTS REVEAL OVERLAPPED GENOMIC REGIONS FOR SEX DETERMINATION IN SILVER CARP AND BIGHEAD CARP (SC11)

Jingou TongInstitute of Hydrobiology Chinese Academy Sciences, China

1630-1645 OPTIMIZATION OF TRIPLOIDY INDUCTION IN BENNI (MESOPOTAMICHTHYS SHARPEYI), USING HEAT AND COLD SHOCKS (CM1)

Elham JorfiIranian Institute of Fisheries Science Research, Iran

1645-1700 ANDROGENETIC DEVELOPMENT IN FISH - RADIATION-INDUCED ALTERATIONS IN THE RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS) EGGS (CM2)

Konrad OcalewiczUniversity of Gdansk, Poland

1700-1715 JAPANESE FLOUNDER: GENOME TO GENOMIC SELECTION BREEDING (GP10)

Songlin ChenYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences

Day End

2018 ISGA XIII 14

TUESDAY 17 JULY 2018 Conference Program

2018 ISGA XIII 15

0845 Good Morning and Welcome

GENOMIC PREDICTION

0845-0915Plenary Speaker: Prof Ben Hayes

Genomic selection and its revolutionary application to aquaculture genetic improvement

Session Chair: Dr Anna Sonneson

0915-0930 DEVELOPMENT OF COST-EFFICIENT AND HIGH-THROUGHPUT GENOTYPING PLATFORMS FOR GENOMIC SELECTION IN SCALLOP BREEDING (GP1)

Qifan ZengOcean University of China, China

0930-0945 LESSONS FROM THE APPLICATION OF GENOMIC SELECTION TO RAINBOW TROUT AQUACULTURE(GP2)

Yniv PaltiNCCCWA-ARS-US Department of Agriculture, United States

0945-1000 GENOMIC PREDICTION FOR A PRECOCIOUS PHENOTYPE IN THE TIGER PUFFERFISH TAKIFUGU RUBRIPES (GP3)

Sho HosoyaUniversity of Tokyo, Japan

1000-1015 IMPLEMENTATION OF MODERN BREEDING TECHNIQUES IN ATLANTIC SALMON (GP4)

Tiago HoriThe Center for Aquaculture Technologies, Canada

1015-1030 USE OF DNA POOLING IN GENOMIC SELECTION FOR A DISEASE RESISTANCE TRAIT IN ATLANTIC SALMON (SALMO SALAR) (GP6)

Binyam Sime DagnachewNofima, Norway

Morning Tea – 30 minutes

1100-1115 GENOMIC APPROACHES TO SELECTIVE BREEDING FOR DISEASE RESISTANCE IN PACIFIC OYSTERS (CRASSOSTREA GIGAS) (GP7)

Ross HoustonThe Roslin Institute, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom

1115-1130 GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION STUDY (GWAS) REVEALS GENES ASSOCIATED WITH THE ABSENCE OF INTERMUSCULAR BONES IN TAMBAQUI (COLOSSOMA MACROPOMUM) (GP8)

Alexandre HilsdorfUniversity of Mogi das Cruzes, Brazil

1130-1145 HERITABILITY OF TOLERANCE TO GILL-ASSOCIATED VIRUS UNDER EXPERIMENTAL CHALLENGE IN THE BLACK TIGER SHRIMP (PENAEUS MONODON) (GP9)

Tansyn NobleJames Cook University, Australia

TUESDAY 17 JULY 2018 Conference Program

2018 ISGA XIII 16

SELECTIVE BREEDING AND QUANTITATIVE GENETICSSession Chair: Dr Marc Vandeputte

1145-1200 GENETIC PARAMETERS OF CAVIAR PRODUCTION IN DNA-PEDIGREED OCTOPLOID SIBERIAN STURGEON ACIPENSER BAERII (SBQ1)

Anastasia BestinSYSAAF, France

1200-1215 HERITABILITY OF GROWTH, AND IMMUNE TRAITS OF BIGHEADCATFISH, CLARIAS MACROCEPHALUS GÜNTHER, 1864 (SBQ2)

Satid ChatchaiphanKasetsart University, Thailand

1215-1230 GENOTYPE BY ENVIRONMENT INTRACTIONS IN SHRIMP PRODUCTION: PRESENT SCENARIO, CONSTRAINTS, POTENTIAL AND IMPLICATION IN GENETIC IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMS (SBQ3)

MD Mehedi HasanThe University of Sydney, Australia

Lunch – 60 minutes

1330-1345 ESTIMATION OF GENETIC PARAMETERS OF GROWTH, MORPHOLOGIC, IMMUNE AND BEHAVIORAL TRAITS IN A MIXED-FAMILY COHORT OF THE EUROPEAN ABALONE HALIOTIS TUBERCULATA. (SBQ4)

Pierre BoudryIfremer, France

1345-1400 A CLOSER LOOK AT TURBOT GENOME REVEALS A GENETIC COMPONENT OF PARASITE RESISTANCE: NEW TOOLS FOR SELECTION (SBQ5)

Paulino MartinezUniversidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain

1400-1415 GENOTYPING AND GENOMIC SELECTION IN ATLANTIC SALMON SALMON SALAR USING GENOTYPING-IN-THOUSANDS BY SEQUENCING (GT-SEQ) AND GENOTYPING-BY-SEQUENCING (GBS)(SBQ6)

Rayna AndersonAgResearch, New Zealand

1415-1430 ESTIMATION OF THE GENETIC PARAMETERS OF FEED EFFICIENCY IN JUVENILE NILE TILAPIA OREOCHROMIS NILOTICUS USING VIDEO ANALYSES (SBQ7)

Hugues de VerdalCIRAD, France

1430-1445 IMPACT ON GENOMIC PREDICTION OF MIXING BETWEEN PARALLEL YEAR GROUPS IN ATLANTIC SALMON BREEDING PROGRAMS (SBQ9)

Panagiotis KokkiniasUniversity of Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Afternoon Tea – 30 minutes

TUESDAY 17 JULY 2018 Conference Program

2018 ISGA XIII 17

SELECTIVE BREEDING AND QUANTITATIVE GENETICS

1530-1545 SELECTIVE BREEDING OF A FAST-GROWING VARIETY AND GENETIC DISSECTION OF ECONOMICALLY IMPORTANT PRODUCTION TRAITS IN THE PACIFIC OYSTER CRASSOSTREA GIGAS (SBQ10)

Shikai LiuOcean University of China, China

1545-1600 DELIVERY OF GENOMIC SOLUTIONS TO THE NEW ZEALAND AQUACULTURE INDUSTRY (SBQ11)

Shannon ClarkeAgresearch, New Zealand

1600-1615 GENOME EDITING TO INTRODUCE NEW TRAITS IN AQUACULTURE BREEDING POPULATIONS (SBQ12)

John BastiaansenWageningen University, Netherlands

INDUSTRY USE OF GENETICSSession Chair: Dr Jane Symonds

1615-1630 GENETIC IMPROVEMENT IN TASMANIAN ATLANTIC SALMON SALMO SALAR AFTER 14 YEARS OF SELECTIVE BREEDING (IUG2)

Peter KubeCSIRO, Australia

1630-1645 IMPLEMENTATION OF GENOMIC SELECTION IN TASMANIAN ATLANTIC SALMON (GP5)

Klara VerbylaCSIRO, Australia

1645-1700 PIPETTE AND PAPER: COMBINING MOLECULAR AND GENEALOGICAL METHODS TO ASSESS A NILE TILAPIA OREOCHROMIS NILOTICUS BREEDING PROGRAM (IUG1)

Maria NayfaJames Cook University, Australia

1700-1715 NEW ZEALAND AQUACULTURE SELECTIVE BREEDING AND INDUSTRY APPLICATION (IUG3)

Jane E SymondsCawthron Institute, New Zealand

1715-1730 Pitch for next ISGA Conference

1730-1830 Poster Sessions

Posters are available for viewing in the Tully Rooms 1, 2 and 3 which are next to the main ballroom.

Day End

WEDNESDAY 18 JULY 2018 Conference Program

2018 ISGA XIII 18

0845 Good Morning and Welcome

GENOMIC TECHNOLOGY

0845-0915Plenary Speaker: Seumas Walker

Application of Genomics to enhance New Zealand Chinook Salmon breeding

Session Chair: Dr Nick Robinson

0915-0930

SINGLE NUCLEOTIDE POLYMORPHISM (SNP) DISCOVERY USING WHOLE-GENOME SEQUENCING OF HUNDREDS OF ANIMALS AND DEVELOPMENT OF A 50K SNP ARRAY FOR NILE TILAPIA (GT1)

Jose Manuel YanezUniversity of Chile, Chile

0930-0945

EXPERIENCES OF USING GENE TRANSCRIPTION DATA FOR eQTL ANALYSIS AND GEBV ESTIMATION(GT2)

Anna SonessonNofima, Norway

0945-1000

APIS: A NEW AUTO-ADAPTIVE PARENTAGE INFERENCE SOFTWARE TOLERANT TO MISSING PARENTS (GT3)

Ronan GriotSYSAAF, France

1000-1015

CRUSTACEAN NUCLEAR LOCALIZATION SIGNALS HELP FACILITATING THE DELIVERY OF DNA INTO AUSTRALIAN RED-CLAW CRAYFISH CELLS (GT4)

Chan NguyenUniversity of the Sunshine Coast, Australia

1015-1030

HYBRID ASSEMBLY OF THE BLACK TIGER SHRIMP GENOME (PENAEUS MONODON) (GT5)

Juan MontenegroAustralian Genome Research Facility, Australia

Morning Tea – 30 minutes

GENETICS OF DISEASE AND STRESS

1100-1130Plenary Speaker: Dr Lior David

The complex genetic basis of disease resistance – insights from KHV in carp

Session Chair: Prof Paulino Martinez

1130-1145

COULD GENOMICS PREDICT RESISTANCE TO VIRAL NERVOUS NECROSIS IN WILD POPULATIONS OF EUROPEAN SEA BASS (GDS1)

Francois AllalIfremer, France

1145-1200

RESPONSE OF THE SALMON TRANSCRIPTOME TO PANCREATIC DISEASE: COMPARISON OF HIGH-AND LOW-RANKING FAMILIES FOR RESISTANCE (GDS2)

Nick RobinsonNofima, Norway and The University of Melbourne, Australia

WEDNESDAY 18 JULY 2018 Conference Program

2018 ISGA XIII 19

GENETICS OF DISEASE AND STRESS cont

1200-1215

IDENTIFICATION AND EVALUATION OF LONG NON-CODING RNAS RESPONSE TO HANDLING STRESS IN RED CUSK-EEL (GENYPTERUS CHILENSIS) THROUGH RNA-SEQ. (GDS3)

Phillip DettleffAndres Bello University, Chile

1215-1230

HERITABILITY ESTIMATES AND SELECTION RESPONSE FOR RESISTANCE TO STREPTOCOCCUS AGALACTIAE IN RED TILAPIA (GDS4)

Sila SukhavachanaKasetsart University, Thailand

Lunch – 60 minutes

1330-1345

MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION FOR RESISTANCE TO BACTERIAL COLD WATER DISEASE IN A COMMERCIAL RAINBOW TROUT POPULATION (GDS5)

Sixin LiuNational Center for Cool and Cold Water Aquaculture, United States

1345-1400

ATLANTIC SALMON miRNAs RESPONDING DIFFERENTLY TO INFECTIOUS PANCREATIC NECROSIS VIRUS (IPNV) INFECTION IN FISH SELECTED FOR RESISTANCE OR SUSCEPTIBILITY TO IPNV INFECTION (GDS6)

Nardos Tesfaye WoldemariamOslo Metropolitan University, Norway

1400-1415

FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION OF KAZAL TYPE PROTEASE INHIBITORS FROM SEBASTES SCHLEGELII AND HIPPOCAMPUS ABDOMINALIS: MOLECULAR INSIGHT INTO HEPATIC IMMUNE DEFENSE IN TELEOST (GDS7)

Hyukjae KwonJeju National University, South Korea

1415-1430

RESISTANCE TO FLAVOBACTERIUM PSYCHROPHILUM IN RAINBOW TROUT: QTL DETECTION REVEALS EFFECT OF INFECTION ROUTE AND EPISTATIC INTERACTIONS (GDS8)

Clemence FraslinINRA / SYSAAF, France

1430-1445

GENOMIC APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING AND IMPROVING RESISTANCE TO SALMONID RICKETTSIAL SYNDROME IN ATLANTIC SALMON (GDS9)

Diego RobledoThe Roslin Institute, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom

1445-1500

HYPOXIA-TOLERANT PERFORMANCE IN SELECTED BREEDING F4 STRAIN OF BLUNT SNOUT BREAM (MEGALOBRAMA AMBLYCEPHALA) UNDER HYPOXIA STRESS (GDS10)

Shuming ZhouShanghai Ocean University, China

Afternoon Tea – 30 minutes

WEDNESDAY 18 JULY 2018 Conference Program

2018 ISGA XIII 20

GENETICS OF NUTRITION

3:30-4:00Plenary Speaker: Antti Kause

Phenotyping for genetic improvement of feed efficiency in fish: lessons from pig breeding

Session Chair: Dr Nick Wade

1600-1615 GENETIC IMPROVEMENT OF FEED CONVERSION RATIO IN SEA BASS USING NOVEL PHENOTYPES AND GENOMIC DATA (NG2)

Marc VandeputteINRA, France

1615-1630 CYSTEAMINE PATHWAY: A MAJOR TAURINE SYNTHESIZING PATHWAY IN COMMON CARP CYPRINUS CARPIO (NG3)

Maria Mojena Gonzales-PlasusWestern Philippines University - Puerto Princesa City, Philippines

1630-1645 ADAPTATION OF RAINBOW TROUT GENOTYPES TO SIMULTANEOUS CHANGES IN MULTIPLE PLANT-BASED DIET INGREDIENTS (NG4)

Antti KauseNatural Resources Institute Finland, Finland

1645-1700 COMPARATIVE GENOMICS STUDY IN CHINESE PERCH AND GRASS CARP (NG5)

Xu-Fang LiangHuazhong Agricultural University, China

1700-1715 DIETARY CARBOHYDRATE PROMOTES HEPATIC DE NOVO LIPOGENESIS IN BARRAMUNDI (LATES CALCARIFER) (NG6)

Nick WadeCSIRO Agriculture and Food, Australia

Day End

1830-0000 CONFERENCE DINNER

Aqualuna Resturant at the Cairns AquariumDinner starts at 6:30pm

See page 26 for more details.

THURSDAY19 JULY 2018 Conference Program

2018 ISGA XIII 21

0845 Good Morning and Welcome

EPIGENETICS

0845-0915Plenary Speaker: Prof Francesc Piferrer

Development of essential epigenetic markers: Application to the predication of gonadal sex and the identification of the early signs of domestication.

Session Chair: Prof Dean Jerry

0915-0930

GROWTH-ASSOCIATED DNA METHYLATION AND HYDROXYMETHYLATION MARKS IN NILE TILAPIA MUSCLE (EPI1)

Jorge FernandesNord University, Norway

0930-0945

ANALYSIS OF GENETIC VARIABILITY OF DNA METHYLATION IN RESPONSE TO AN EARLY TEMPERATURE STRESS IN RAINBOW TROUT (EPI2)

Delphine LalliasINRA, France

0945-1000

IS TEMPERATURE DRIVING SEX CHANGE IN BARRAMUNDI (LATES CALCARIFER)? (EPI3)

Alyssa BuddJames Cook University, Australia

Morning Tea – 30 minutes

GENOMICS AND METABIOMESSession Chair: Dr Gen Hua Yue

1030-1045

CAN CHANGES IN POND YIELD IN THE BLACK TIGER SHRIMP PENAEUS MONODON BE DETECTED BY STUDYING THE BACTERIAL MICROBIOTA? (GM1)

Sandra Infante VillamilJames Cook University, Australia

1045-1100

METAGENOMIC ASSESSMENT OF THE BODY SURFACE MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES OF THE SEA URCHIN, TRIPNEUSTES GRATILLA (GM2)

Marissa BrinkStellenbosch University, South Africa

1100-1115

GENETICS, GENOMICS AND MICROBIOMICS, UNDERLYING COLD TOLERANCE IN THE BLUE TILAPIA (OREOCHROMIS AUREUS) (GM3)

Avner CnaaniAgricultural Research Organization, Israel

1130-1800

SOCIAL EVENT – TOURDeparts at 11:30am from PullmanAnticipated return to Pullman is 6:00pm

FRIDAY 20 JULY 2018 Conference Program

2018 ISGA XIII 22

0845 Good Morning and Welcome

POPULATION GENETICS

Session Chair: Dr Catarina Silva

0900-0915

THE STATE OF THE WORLD’S AQUATIC GENETIC RESOURCES (PG10)

Graham MairFAO, Italy

0915-0930

LACK OF INTROGRESSIVE HYBRIDIZATION BY NORTH AFRICAN CATFISH (CLARIAS GARIEPINUS) IN NATIVE VIETNAMESE BIGHEAD CATFISH (CLARIAS MACROCEPHALUS) POPULATIONS (PG1)

Thuy-Yen DuongCan Tho University, Viet Nam

0930-0945

BROODSTOCK CONTRIBUTION AND GENETIC DIVERSITY FROM WEANING TO MARKETABLE SIZE IN A COMMERCIAL COHORT OF DUSKY KOB (PG2)

Clint RhodeStellenbosch University, South Africa

0945-1000

USE OF GENOTYPING-BY-SEQUENCING FOR STUDYING THE GENETIC CHARACTERISTICS OF A POPULATION (PG3)

Ken DoddsAgResearch, New Zealand

Morning Tea – 30 minutes

1030-1045

POPULATION GENOMICS OF COHO SALMON FROM CHILE AND NORTH AMERICA (PG5)

Victor MartinezUniversity of Chile, Chile

1045-1100

POPULATION GENOMICS AND ADAPTIVE EVOLUTION STUDIES OF CHINESE SEA BASS (LATEOLABRAX MACULATUS) (PG6)

Peng XuXiamen University, China

1100-1115

HIGH RATE OF DE NOVO MUTATIONS IN A BIVALVE SPECIES (PG7)

Carolina PenalozaRoslin Institute, Chile

1115-1130

GROWTH AND MICROSATELLITE DNA MARKER ANALYSIS OF PHILIPPINE DONKEY’S EAR ABALONE HALIOTIS ASININA STOCKS FOR USE IN BROODSTOCK DEVELOPMENT (PG8)

Maria Rowena R. Romana-EguiaSoutheast Asian Fisheries Development Center, Aquaculture Department (SEAFDEC/AQD), Philippines

FRIDAY 20 JULY 2018 Conference Program

2018 ISGA XIII 23

POPULATION GENETICS cont

1130-1145

DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF GENOMIC TOOLS FOR CLEANERFISH FARMING (PG9)

David PenmanUniversity of Stirling, United Kingdom

Lunch – 60 minutes

ETHICS, FOOD SAFETY AND ENVIRONMENTAL RISKSession Chair: Dr Ingrid Oleson

1245-1300

GENERATION OF GENE-EDITED BLUEGILL LEPOMIS MACROCHIRUS FOR CONTROL AND ERADICATION OF INVASIVE SPECIES BY GENE INDUCED SUPPRESSION FOR ALIEN POPULATION (GISAP) (EFE1)

Hiroyuki OkamotoNRIA/ FRA, Japan

1315-1330

FITNESS EFFECTS OF INTROGRESSION OF ESCAPED FARMED SALMON INTO WILD POPULATIONS (EFE4)

Marie LillehammerNofima, Norway

1330-1345

NATIONAL TRACING SYSTEM FOR ESCAPED ATLANTIC SALMON (EFE5)

Trina GallowayAquaGen, Norway

1300-1315

THE UNACKNOWLEDGED UNCERTAINTY OF BIOPATENTING; A CASE STUDY OF THE AQUABOUNTY PATENT IN THE EUROPEAN PATENT SYSTEM (EFE2)

Ingrid OlesenNofima, Norway

1345-1445Closing Ceremony

Including presentations of student prizes for Oral and Poster and announcement of vote for next ISGA

2018 ISGA XIII 24

Included in the tour is:• Private coach

• Entry to both farms• Private guided tour with wildlife keepers

• Guided Wetlands Crocodile Cruise• Guided Barramundi Farm Tour

• Picnic Lunch and Cold Water provided

The tour is included in the Delegate Full Conference Pass.Or, if you have registered to attend on the Thursday with a Day

Delegate Pass this tour is included.

Exclusive Charter Coaches will collect delegates from the Pullman Cairns International after the morning session

Thursday 19th July 2018Departing at 11:30am

On the half day tour you will visit:

Hartley’s Crocodile Adventures, one of the longest established wildlife attractions in Tropical North Queensland, as well as being a working crocodile farm producing skins & meat for export &

domestic consumption.

Daintree Saltwater Barramundi Fish Farm who have been producing Australia’s best hand-reared Barramundi for over a decade. The pond is stocked with over 1,500 Barramundi (including albinos)

Barramundi range from weight: 1 to 12kg. length 50cm to 1m.

Throughout the guided tours you are sure to come across some of Australia’s native animals including, Koalas, Cassowaries and Wallabies!

SOCIAL PROGRAM

TOUR

2018 ISGA XIII 25

Dinner will include:

3 courses with local seafood highlighted throughout the dishes

Drinks package is available until 9:30pm (a cash bar will be opened after for

additional purchases)

If you have any dietary requirements, please let us know upon registration.

CONFERENCE DINNERProudly Sponsored by

Aqualuna is located at the Cairns AquariumAbout a 10 minute walk down Abbott St.

Aqualuna

Pullman Hotel

Dinner will begin at 6:30pm*Please note that the venue closes at midnight.

*Images courtesy of Aqualuna

This dining experience is an optional event and is not included in the Full or Day Delegate Pass. If you have not registered please make alternative dining arrangements for Thursday night. If you would like some suggestions please don’t hesitate to ask us

SOCIAL PROGRAM

2018 ISGA XIII 26

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND FUNCTIONAL GENOMICS

BFG1 DEVELOPMENT OF EFFICIENT MICROINJECTION TECHNIQUES FOR GENOME EDITING IN YELLOWTAIL SERIOLA QUINQUERADIATA.

Takashi IshikawaNational Research Institute of Aquaculture, FRA Japan

BFG2 GENOME EDITING OF MYOSTATIN GENE BY CRISPR/CAS9 SYSTEM IN YELLOWTAIL SERIOLA QUINQUERADIATA

Yukinori ShimadaNational Research Institute of Aquaculture, FRA Japan

BFG3 ESTABLISHMENT OF INTRAPERITONEAL GERM CELL TRANSPLANTATION TECHNIQUE IN JAPANESE FLOUNDER PARALICHTHYS OLIVACEUS

Yutaka TakeuchiKagoshima University, Japan

BFG4 IDENTIFICATION AND VERIFICATION OF GENES INVOLVED IN DEVELOPMENT OF INTERMUSCULAR BONE IN BLUNT SNOUT BREAM

Shi-Ming WanHuazhong Agricultural University, China

BFG5 PRODUCTION OF DONOR-DERIVED SPERM IN STERILE HYBRID CROAKERS FOLLOWING SPERMATOGONIAL CELL TRANSPLANTATION IN ADULT FISH

Dongdong XuMarine Fishery Institute of Zhejiang Province

ETHICS FOOD SAFETY AND ENIVIONMENTAL RISKS

EFE1 SEX REVERSAL IN BLUEGILL LEPOMIS MACROCHIRUS BY ORAL ADMINISTRATION OF SEX HORMONE

Hiromi OkuNational Research Institute of Aquaculture, Japan

EFE2 TRANSPLANTATION OF BLUEGILL LEPOMIS MACROCHIRUS SPERMATOGONIAL CELLS TO OTHER KINDS OF GENUS LEPOMIS: A PRELIMINARY STUDY FOR SURROGATE PRODUCTION OF BLUEGILL

Hiromi OkuNational Research Institute of Aquaculture, Japan

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 27

GENETICS OF DISEASE AND STRESS

GDS1 A SIMPLE CONDITION INDEX TO BE CONSIDERED IN SHRIMP BREEDING PROGRAMS

Sarah BerryJames Cook University, Australia

GDS2 ASSESSMENT OF THE ORIGIN OF WHITE SPOT SYNDROME VIRUS COLLECTED FROM AN OUTBREAK IN SHRIMP PENAEUS MONODON FARMS AND IMPORTED SHRIMP PRODUCTS IN AUSTRALIA

Cuong LeThe University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia

GDS3 MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION AND EXPRESSION UNDER IMMUNE STIMULATION OF BIG BELLY SEAHORSE INTERLEUKIN-15 (HIPPOCAMPUS ABDOMINALIS)

Sukkyoung LeeJeju National University, South Korea

GDS4 MOLECULAR INSIGHTS AND IMMUNE RESPONSES OF RED-LIP MULLET Liza haematocheilaSYNDECAN-1

Dileepa S LiyanageJeju National University, South Korea

GDS5 CHARACTERIZATION OF THE THYMUS TRANSCRIPTOME IN THE FLATFISH TURBOT (SCOPHTHALMUS MAXIMUS L.)

Paulino MartinezUniversidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain

GDS6 PHOSPHOLIPID SCRAMBLASE 1 FROM RED LIP MULLET (CHELON HAEMATOCHEILUS): IDENTIFICATION AND EXPRESSION ANALYSIS UPON IMMUNE RELATED RESPONSES

Wijamunige Gayashani SandamalikaJeju National University, South Korea

GDS7 A NOVEL MISSENSE MUTATION IN DUOXA2 CAUSING BODY COLOR TRANSPARENCY IN JUVENILE RED SEA BREAM (PAGRUS MAJOR)

Eitaro SawayamaMarua Suisan Co., Ltd., Japan

GDS8 CHARACTERIZATION AND EXPRESSION ANALYSIS OF GLUTATHIONE S- TRANSFERASE ALPHA IN MULLET Liza haemotocheila

D.M.K.P. SirisenaJeju National University, South Korea

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 28

GENETICS OF DISEASE AND STRESS

GDS9 GENE EXPRESSION DIFFERENCES BETWEEN ABALONE THAT ARE SUSCEPTIBLE AND RESILIENT TO SUMMER MORTALITY THROUGHOUT A HEAT WAVE EVENT

Jan StrugnellJames Cook University, Australia

GDS10 VERTICAL VERSUS HORIZONTAL TRANSMISSION OF GILL-ASSOCIATED VIRUS IN BLACK TIGER SHRIMP, PENAEUS MONODON IMPLICATIONS FOR BREEDING PROGRAMS

Cheryl TanJames Cook University, Australia

GDS11 MOLECULAR AND TRANSCRIPTIONAL INSIGHT INTO GLUTATHIONE DEPENDANT REDOX HOMEOSTASIS; GLUTAREDOXIN 3 FROM REDLIP MULLET Liza haematocheila

Omeka M Welivitiye KankanamgeJeju National University, South Korea

GDS12 POPULATION GENOMICS IDENTIFIES SIGNATURES OF SELECTION AND ASSOCIATIONS TO DISEASE RESISTANCE IN Cynoglossus semilaevis

Qian ZhouYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences

GENOMIC PREDICTION

GP1 FINE MAPPING OF GENOMIC REGIONS INVOLVED IN SEX DETERMINATION IN NILE TILAPIA (OREOCHROMIS NILOTICUS L) USING WHOLE GENOME SEQUENCING

Giovanna Cáceres CrusUniversidad de Chile, Chile

GP2 PINNING DOWN TO A SINGLE GENE RESPONSIBLE FOR TELEOST FISH BARBEL DEVELOPMENT THROUGH COMPARATIVE GENOME AND TRANSCRIPTOME ANALYSIS

Dongya GaoAuburn University, United States

GP3 HIGH-THROUGHPUT PHENOMICS USING DEEP LEARNING FOR EFFICIENT BREEDING PROGRAMS IN BLACK TIGER SHRIMP PENEAUS MONODON

Mehar KhatkarThe University of Sydney, Australia

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 29

GENOMIC PREDICTION

GP4 16S MTRNA SEQUENCE OF INBREDS AND INTRA-SPECIFIC CROSSBREDS OF AFRICAN CATFISH CLARIAS GARIEPINUS REVEALED SINGLE NUCLEOTIDE POLYMORPHISM (SNP) MARKER OF PROTEIN IMPLICATION

Oyediran Olusegun OyebolaUniversity of Ibadan, Nigeria

GP6 WHOLE-GENOME LINKAGE DISEQUILIBRIUM IN NILE TILAPIA (Oreochromis niloticus) FARMED POPULATIONS

Jose Manuel YanezUniversity of Chile, Chile

GENOMIC TECHNOLOGY

GT1 DEVELOPMENT OF THE AXIOM_DLABCHIP, A 57K SINGLE NUCLEOTIDE POLYMORPHISM ARRAY IN THE EUROPEAN SEA BASS, CHARACTERIZATION IN EMG AND FMD SELECTED LINES

Francois AllalIfremer, France

GT2 DIFFERENTIAL EXPRESSION OF SIX RNASE2 AND THREE RNASE3 PARALOGS IDENTIFIED IN BLUNT SNOUT BREAM IN RESPONSE TO AEROMONAS HYDROPHILA INFECTION

Ruijing GengHuazhong Agricultural University, China

GT3 DEVELOPMENT OF A NON-INVASIVE TISSUE SAMPLING TECHNIQUE FOR EXTRACTION OF GENOMIC DNA, FOCUSING ON PINCTADA MAXIMA

Cara JeffreyJames Cook University, Australia

GT4 GENOME SEQUENCING OF TWO ABALONE SPECIES FOR ASSESSING GENETIC DIVERSITY AND DEVELOPMENT OF A SNP GENOTYPING TOOL

James KijasCSIRO, Australia

GT5 NOVEL APPLICATION OF RESTRICTION ASSOCIATED SEQUENCING FOR DE NOVO GENETIC MARKER DISCOVERY IN NON-MODEL ORGANISMS (OSTREA CHILENSIS)

Guillermo Rodriguez-PiccoliUniversidad Santo Tomás Puerto Montt, Chile

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 30

GENOMIC TECHNOLOGY

GT6 TRANSCRIPTOMES OF THE SEXUALLY DIMORPHIC CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM OF DEVELOPING MOZAMBIQUE TILAPIA (OREOCHROMIS MOSSAMBICUS)

Zi Yi WanTemasek Life Sciences Laboratory, Singapore

GT7 MOLECULAR CLONING, CHARACTERIZATION AND EXPRESSION ANALYSIS OF VITELLOGENIN GENE IN THE PEN SHELL, ATRINA PECTINATE

Hong YuOcean University of China, China

GT8 PHYLOGENOMICS AND COMPARATIVE ANALYSES FOR MITOCHONDRIAL GENOMES OF THREE VIOLET-RINGED OCTOPUSES

Xiaodong ZhengOcean University of China, China

GENOMICS AND METABIOMES

GM1 COMPARATIVE TRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSIS OF HYPOTHALAMUS-PITUITARY-LIVER AXIS IN BIGHEAD CARP (HYPOPHTHALMICHTHYS NOBILIS) WITH DIFFERENTIAL GROWTH RATE

Beide FuInstitute of Hydrobiology, China

GM2 IMMUNE-RELATED GENES AND SIGNALLING PATHWAYS IN THE TROPICAL SPINY LOBSTER (PANULIRUS ORNATUS)

Thu Thi Anh NguyenUniversity of Tasmania, Australia

GM3 DRAFT GENOME OF THE HONG KONG OYSTER CRASSOSTREA HONGKONGENSIS

Ziniu YuSouth China Sea Institute of Oceanology, China

INDUSTRY USE OF GENETICS

IUG1 FROM LAB TO FIELD- USING MARKER ASSISTED SELECTION IN UK OYSTER PRODUCTION

Tim BeanCefas, United Kingdom

IUG2 A NATIONAL TRACEABILITY SYSTEM FOR ESCAPED FARMED SALMON

Trina GallowayAquaGen AS, Norway

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 31

NUTRIGENOMICS

NG1 DEVELOPMENT OF HIGH-THROUGHPUT PROTEOMIC RESOURCES FOR THE GIANT TIGER PRAWN, PENAEUS MONODON, AND EFFECTS.

Omar Mendoza-PorrasCSIRO Agriculture and Food, Australia

NG2 INTRA-SPECIFIC GENOTYPES SHOWED DIVERGENCE IN NUTRITIONAL QUALITIES IN FRESHWATER PRAWN MACROBRACHIUM VOLLENHOVENII

Oyediran Olusegun OyebolaUniversity of Ibadan, Nigeria

POPULATION GENETICS

PG1 HETEROGENEITY OF GENETIC DIVERSITY THROUGHOUT THE GENOME IN RAINBOW TROUT POPULATIONS

Jonathan D'AmbrosioINRA, SYSAAF, France

PG2 IN-SILICO APPROACH FOR THE PRIMERS DESIGN IN REGIONS ASSOCIATED TO MICROSATELLITES IN FLATFISHES

Johnny Davila-SandovalUniversidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Peru

PG3 GENETIC ANALYSIS OF FARM STOCKS FOR PACÊ PIARACTUS MESOPOTAMICUS AQUACULTURE, A GROWING ACTIVITY IN THE REGION.

Felipe del PazoRosario National University, Argentina

PG4 UNDERSTANDING POPULATION STRUCTURE AND REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR OF HATCHERY-PRODUCED AND WILD YELLOWTAIL KINGFISH (SERIOLA LALANDI).

Phillip DettleffAndres Bello University, Chile

PG5 EVALUATION OF POPULATION STRUCTURE IN RED CUSK-EEL (GENYPTERUS CHILENSIS) TROUGH DEVELOPMENT OF MICROSATELLITE MARKERS

Phillip DettleffAndres Bello University, Chile

PG6 GENETIC DIVERSITY AND INTROGRESSIVE HYBRIDIZATION BY AFRICAN CATFISH

Thuy-Yen DuongCan Tho University, Vietnam

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 32

POPULATION GENETICS

PG7 CONSIDERATIONS FOR MAINTAINING GENETIC DIVERSITY IN COMMERCIALLY MASS SPAWNED PENAEID SHRIMP

Andrew FooteJames Cook University, Australia

PG8 SNP DATA CONTRADICT PREVIOUS STUDIES THAT SHOW NO GENETIC DIFFERENCES FOR TROPICAL ROCK LOBSTER POPULATIONS IN SE ASIA AND AUSTRALIA

Wayne KnibbUniversity of the Sunshine Coast, Australia

PG9 UNDERSTANDING THE FUNCTIONAL EFFECTS OF ARTIFICIAL AND NATURAL SELECTION IN THE ATLANTIC SALMON GENOME

Victor MartinezUniversity of Chile, Chile

PG10 GENOTYPING-BY-SEQUENCING REVEALS SHALLOW GENOMIC DIVERGENCE, INTRODUCTION ROUTES AND LATITUDINAL ADAPTATION OF GRASS CARP

Yubang ShenTemasek Lifesciences Laboratory, Singapore

PG10 EVALUATION OF GENETIC EFFECT OF ARTIFICIAL SEED RELEASE AND IDENTIFICATION OF ORIGINAL POPULATION IN JAPANESE CHARR, SALVELINUS LEUCOMAENIS

Masamichi NakajimaTohoku University, Japan

PG11 PEDIGREE ANALYSIS IN COMPLEX BREEDING SPECIES USING SNPS AN EXAMPLE FROM YELLOWTAIL KINGFISH

Ajith PremachandraUniversity of the Sunshine Coast, Australia

PG12 NOVEL APPLICATION OF RESTRICTION ASSOCIATED SEQUENCING FOR DE NOVO GENETIC MARKER DISCOVERY IN NON-MODEL ORGANISMS (OSTREA CHILENSIS)

Guillermo Rodriguez-PiccoliUniversidad Santo Tomás Puerto Montt, Chile

PG13 POPULATION STUCTURING IN BALLAN WRASSE (LABRUS BERGYLTA) THROUGHOUT THE UK AND NORWAY

Sarah-Louise SellyUniversity of Stirling, United Kingdom

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 33

POPULATION GENETICS

PG14 POPULATION STUCTURING IN BALLAN WRASSE (LABRUS BERGYLTA) THROUGHOUT THE UK AND NORWAY

Sarah-Louise SellyUniversity of Stirling, United Kingdom

PG15 DEVELOPMENT AND CHARACTERIZATION OF INFORMATIVE MICROSATELLITE MARKERS FOR THE NON-MODEL SPECIES DISSOSTICHUS ELEGINOIDES USING PAIRED-END ILLUMINA SHOTGUN SEQUENCING

Rodrigo VidalUniversidad de Santiago, Chile

PG16 POPULATION GENETIC STRUCTURE OF THE GIANT BLACK TIGER SHRIMP (PENAEUS MONODON) IN AUSTRALIA USING SNP LOCI

Nga VuJames Cook University, Australia

PG17 A RELIABLE AND COST-EFFECTIVE GENOTYPING STRATEGY FOR DNA PARENTAGE ANALYSIS OF COBIA (RACHYCENTRON CANADUM)

Jose DomingosJames Cook University, Singapore

SELECTIVE BREEDING AND QUANTITATIVE GENETICS

SBQ1 OPTIMIZING THE SELECTION OF SILVER LIPPED PEARL OYSTERS PINCTADA MAXIMA IN A FOUNDER POPULATION USING PHENOTYPIC AND GENOTYPIC DATA.

Thomas AckeryJames Cook University, Australia

SBQ2 EVALUATION OF REPRODUCTIVE AND GROWTH PERFORMANCE, SURVIVAL, DEFORMITY AND BODY COLOUR OF DIFFERENT PACIFIC WHITELEG SHRIMP LITOPENAEUS VANNAMEI LINES FOR A SELECTIVE BREEDING PROGRAM IN VIETNAM

Truong Giang CaoUniversity of the Sunshine Coast, Australia

SBQ3 ESTIMATION OF HERITABILITY OF WEIGHT AT HARVEST IN HATCHERY-PRODUCED CHILEAN YELLOWTAIL KINGFISH (SERIOLA LALANDI).

Phillip DettleffAndres Bello University, Chile

SBQ4 HERITABILITY FOR GROWTH UNDER CHRONIC HEAT STRESS IN RAINBOW TROUT ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS.

Jousepth Gallardo-HidalgoUniversidad de Chile, Chile

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 34

SELECTIVE BREEDING AND QUANTITATIVE GENETICS

SBQ5 FAMILY TIES: USING PARENTAGE AND RELATEDNESS ANALYSIS TO IMPROVE SELECTIVE BREEDING IN AQUACULTURE

Julie GoldsburyJames Cook University, Australia

SBQ6 DEVELOPMENT OF A HIGHLY INFORMATIVE AND COST EFFECTIVE GENOTYPING PANEL FOR ADVANCED BLACK TIGER SHRIMP BREEDING PROGRAMS

Jarrod GuppyJames Cook University, Australia

SBQ7 ULTRASOUND IMAGE CAPTURE AND GENETIC PARAMETERS OF LOIN EYE AREA AND INTER-RIB SPACE OF TAMBAQUI (COLOSSOMA MACROPOMUM): AN IMPORTANT AQUACULTURE SPECIES IN SOUTH AMERICA

Alexandre HilsdorfUniversity of Mogi das Cruzes. Brazil

SBQ8 DERIVATION OF THE ECONOMIC VALUE OF R0 FOR MACROPARASITES APPLICATION TO SEA LICE IN SALMON

Kasper JanssenWageningen University, Netherlands

SBQ9 COMPARATIVE UTILITY OF GENOMIC RELATIONSHIP MATRICES FOR GENOMIC SELECTION BASED VARYING METHODS AND SNP DENSITY

Nima KhalilisamaniUniversity of Sydney, Australia

SBQ10 MULTIPLE-TRAIT GENETIC EVALUATION OF THE PACIFIC WHITE SHRIMP LITOPENAEUS VANNAMEI IN CHINA

Jie KongYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences

SBQ11 LOCUS MAPPING, MOLECULAR CLONING AND EXPRESSION ANALYSIS OF RPS6KB2, A NOVEL METAMORPHOSIS-RELATED GENE IN FLATFISH

Yang LiuYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences

SBQ12 THE PROGRESS OF BREEDING AND MOLECULAR ANALYSIS OF CHINESE SHRIMP (FENNEROPENAEUS CHINENSIS) IN CHINA

Xianhong MengYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 35

SELECTIVE BREEDING AND QUANTITATIVE GENETICS

SBQ13 GENOTYPE BY ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION FOR GROWTH AND SURVIVAL OF NILE TILAPIA IN AERATED AND NON-AERATED PONDS

Samuel Bekele MengistuWageningen University, Netherlands

SBQ14 HERITABILITIES OF RESISTANCE TO VNN AND VIBRIOSIS AND GENETIC CORRELATIONS WITH PRODUCTION TRAITS AND PROCESSISNG YIELDS IN TWO SELECTED COMMERCIAL LINES OF THE EUROPEAN SEA BASS DICENTRARCHUS LABRAX

Romain MorvezenSYSAAF, France

SBQ15 LACK OF SELECTION RESPONSE IN TWO DOMESTICATED POPULATIONS OF SNAKESKIN GOURAMI, TRICHOPODUS PECTORALIS, REGAN 1910

Uthairat Na-NakornKasetsart University. Thailand

SBQ16 HERITABILITY OF GROWTH TRAITS AND GENOTYPE-ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION OF NORTH AFRICAN CATFISH, CLARIAS GARIEPINUS

Witsanu SirmaiKasetsart University. Thailand

SBQ17 UTILISATION OF SINGLE NUCLEOTIDE POLYMORPHISMS IN THE INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH FACTOR BINDING PROTEIN 5 GENE

Thi Hong Tham NguyenUniversity of Newcastle, Australia

SBQ18 GENETIC PARAMETERS AND QTL ANALYSIS ASSOCIATED WITH BODY SIZE AND TIMING AT METAMORPHOSIS INTO GLASS EELS IN CAPTIVE-BRED JAPANESE EELS ANGUILLA JAPONICA

Kazuharu NomuraNational Research Institute of Aquaculture, Fisheries Research Agency, Japan

SBQ19 HERITABILITY AND MARKER-TRAIT ASSOCIATIONS FOR RESISTANCE TO HEPATOPANCRETIC PARVOVIRUS IN BANANASHRIMP (FENNEROPENAEUS MERGUIENSIS)

Chontida PhuthawornUniversity of the Sunshine Coast, Australia

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 36

SELECTIVE BREEDING AND QUANTITATIVE GENETICS

SBQ20 A FIRST DEMONSTRATION OF REALIZED SELECTION RESPONSE FOR FILLET YIELD IN FISH, IN RAINBOW TROUT ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS

Marc VandeputteIRNA, France

SBQ21 QTL MAPPING FOR GROWTH PERFORMANCE AND FATTY ACID COMPOSITIONS IN ASIAN SEABASS

Le WangTemasek Lifesciences Laboratory, Singapore

SBQ22 TOWARD IMPROVE SALINITY TOLERANCE IN TILAPIAS USING MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION

Junhong XiaSun Yat-Sen University, China

SEX CONTROL

SC1 CONSTRUCTION OF A GENETIC LINKAGE MAP AND DEVELOPMENT OF DNA MARKERS LINKED TO THE SEX-DETERMINING LOCUS BY THE GENOTYPING-BY-SEQUENCING METHOD IN MARSUPENAEUS JAPONICAS

Reiko FuseyaNational Research Institute of Fisheries Engineering, Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency, Japan

SC2 TURNOVER OF SEX CHROMOSOMES IN TAKIFUGU FISHES

Kiyoshi KikuchiFisheries Lab, University of Tokyo, Japan

SC3 DO WW HOMOGAMETIC FEMALE REDCLAW CRAYFISH EXIST

Tom LevyBen-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

SC4 SEX-LINKED MARKERS FOR BLACKLIP AND GREENLIP ABALONE

Catarina N.S. SilvaJames Cook University, Australia

SC5 GENOME SEQUENCING AND MAPPING OF SEX-DETERMINING LOCUS IN AYU PLECOGLOSSUS ALTIVELIS

Takashi SakamotoTokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, Japan

LIST OF POSTERS

2018 ISGA XIII 37

Prof Ben Hayes

Prof Ben Hayes is the co-inventor of genomic selection and has extensive research experience in genetic improvement of livestock, crop, pasture and aquaculture species.

He is the author of more than 150 journal papers, in the fields of statistical methodology for genomic, microbiome and metagenomic profile predictions, quantitiative genetics including knowledge of genetic mechanisms underlying complex traits, and development of bioinformatics pipelines for sequence analysis. He was a Thomson Reuters highly cited researcher in 2015 and 2016.His plenary will be on genomic selection and its revolutionary application to aquaculture genetic improvement.

Dr Lene Kleppe

Dr. Lene Kleppe is a scientist at the Institute of Marine Research in Norway, in the research group Reproduction and Developmental Biology. Her research interests include reproductive physiology and genetics in farmed fish species like Atlantic salmon and Atlantic cod. Currently the research group is applying CRISPR/Cas9 to edit genes in Atlantic salmon to understand the molecular mechanisms that control the reproductive system, mainly focusing on germ cell development and puberty. The first gene edited (dead end knockout) salmon produced by the group has no germ cells and does not enter puberty, which are favorable traits for aquaculture due to genetic introgression of farmed escapees with wild populations, and negative effects (reduced growth, welfare and filet quality) of sexual maturation. Ongoing projects are exploring ways to take advantage of this knowledge to contribute to a more sustainable salmon farming industry, and are also exploring other reproductive traits.

Her plenary will be on gene editing by CRISPR as a research tool and possible applications in aquaculture.

BIOGRAPHIES

2018 ISGA XIII 38

Prof Francesc Piferrer

Prof Francesc Piferrer is a Research Professor at the Institute of Marine Sciences (ICM), a Center of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Barcelona. He is an internationally-renowned expert in epigenetics and its role in sex differentiation of aquaculture species.

He is the author of over 175 articles —including a dozen book chapters and the edition of two books— including more than one hundred published in peer-reviewed international journals such as Nature Communications, PLoS Genetics, Bioessays, Genetics, BMC Genomics and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS). His work has been cited about 5,700 times and three of his articles are considered "Highly-cited papers.“

His plenary will be on Epigenetics as a key mechanism in the sex differentiation and sex control of aquaculture species.

Dr Lior David

Dr. Lior David’s expertise is in quantitative genetics, population genetics and evolution. In particular, he has several projects in which he has been studying the genetic basis of complex traits in fish and yeast. His main research projects include studying the genes and mechanisms of disease resistance and sex determination in different fish species.

As part of developing safe and efficient aquaculture, Dr David uses genomics to identify sex determining loci in various economically important fishes and develop genetic markers to use for early and cost-effective determination of sex and for supporting hormonal and genetic sex ratio manipulations. Dr David bred common carp strains, which are genetically resistant to an infectious disease cause by the Koi herpes virus, a devastating disease that spread globally to wherever carp is cultured. After several years of family-based selection, there is now proto-strains that are resistant to the disease, promising to be suitable for culturing in other respects and about to enter field testing.

His keynote will be on The complex genetic basis of disease resistance – insights from KHV in carp

BIOGRAPHIES

2018 ISGA XIII 39

James Cook University (JCU) is proud to be Australia’s leading University for the Tropics. The University is ranked in the top 2 per cent of universities worldwide for academic studies and research by the pre-eminent global rankings system, the Academic Ranking of World Universities (2017).

JCU has three tropical campuses in Townsville, Cairns and Singapore, which each provide an unique opportunity to combine research and study with adventure. Surrounded by some of the world’s most spectacular natural wonders, including vast rainforests, arid outback and the World-Heritage listed Great Barrier Reef, these living laboratories provide JCU staff and students with unlimited research and training opportunities.

For further information on James Cook University visit jcu.edu.au

The ARC Research Hub for Advanced Prawn Breeding is a consortium involving researchers and industry from James Cook University, CSIRO, the Australian Genome Research Facility, University of Sydney and Seafarms Group. The Hub is funded by the Australian Research Council through their Industrial Transformation Research Program.

The overarching goal of the Hub for Advanced Prawn Breeding is to develop and transfer to the Australian farmed black tiger prawn industry the capacity to benefit from advanced genomic-informed breeding programs which target growth and disease performance.

Research within the Hub is focused into four themes; a) producing a comprehensive annotated genome for the black tiger prawn; b) creation of genomic resources including high-density SNP genotyping arrays; c) industrial-scale phenotyping procedures for commercially important traits; d) estimation of genetic parameters (heritability, genetic correlations, GxE) along with the development and evaluation of advanced genomic selection and breeding techniques.

Further information on the ARC Research Hub for Advanced Prawn Breeding can be found at https://www.jcu.edu.au/prawn-breeding-hub

GOLD SPONSORS

2018 ISGA XIII 40

Accelerating plant and animal genomic breakthroughs. A history of progress. A future of promise.

Exponential population growth and a changing climate create unique challenges for those working to maintain food supply. Illumina is continually innovating our agrigenomics technologies to help plant, animal and aquaculture breeders and researchers identify desirable traits, leading to healthier and more productive crops and animals.

We help by investing in knowledge, innovation, and marketing to deliver increased economic, social and environmental benefits for Australian fishing and aquaculture, and the wider community.

The Fisheries Research and Development Corporation (FRDC) is one of Australia’s leading authorities on fishing and aquaculture. It exists to invest public and industry money in research and development (R&D) related to fishing and aquaculture. The knowledge generated is a resource covering fishing and aquaculture issues for the public, industry and government. By virtue of the twenty-five plus years of investment in R&D, and experience gained from listening to stakeholders, FRDC has become a leader in fishing and aquaculture.

The focus for FRDC remains on end users, markets and people participating in fishing and aquaculture, or people who consume seafood. FRDC facilitates extension of its R&D knowledge that leads to adoption and commercialisation. FRDC also works with industry stakeholders where asked to develop and undertake marketing activities. Results and outcomes of all these activities are evaluated and measured to inform future investment.

LGC is an international leader in the laboratory services, measurement standards, reference materials, genomics and proficiency testing marketplaces.

We are a global leader in delivering genomic solutions for research, diagnostics, and applied markets. LGC’s product portfolio provides best-in-class reagents, instruments, and services supporting quantitative and end-point PCR. We offer reagents such as KASP, BHQ® probes, and Array Tape® to complement robust instrumentation including the Nexar®, SNPline, and Oktopure™ for extraction and genotyping, and the IntelliQube®, a fully integrated liquid handling and PCR platform. Our innovative technologies also power lab services for genotyping, DNA extraction, arrays, Genotyping by Sequencing (GBS), Sanger sequencing, and NGS.

LGC operates out of 21 countries, which encompasses our Genomics division’s network of 9 manufacturing facilities and 3 service labs creating a geographic footprint to support customers in all major markets worldwide.

GOLD SPONSORS

2018 ISGA XIII 41

Name Institution Email

Thomas Ackery James Cook University [email protected]

François Allal Ifremer [email protected]

Rayna Anderson AgResearch [email protected]

Rune Johan Andreassen Oslo Metropolitan University [email protected]

Brad Argue Moana Technologies [email protected]

Jinrun Bai Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Ruolin Bai Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Zhiyi Bai Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Zubaida Basiao University of the Philippines [email protected]

John Bastiaansen Wageningen University & Research [email protected]

Tim Bean CEFAS [email protected]

John Benzie WorldFish [email protected]

Sarah Berry James Cook University [email protected]

Anastasia Bestin INRA [email protected]

Doug Black Microchips Australia [email protected]

Natasha Botwright CSIRO [email protected]

Pierre Boudry Ifremer [email protected]

Marissa Brink Stellenbosch University [email protected]

Alyssa Budd James Cook University [email protected]

Truong Giang Cao University of the Sunshine Coast [email protected]

Holly Cate Mainstream Aquaculture [email protected]

Ian Charles Murray Cod [email protected]

Satid Chatchaipun Kasetsart University [email protected]

Songlin ChenYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences [email protected]

Shannon Clarke AgResearch [email protected]

Avner Cnaani Agricultural Research Organization [email protected]

Greg Coman CSIRO [email protected]

Binyam Sime Dagnachew Nofima [email protected]

Jonathan D'Ambrosio INRA, Gabi jonathan.d'[email protected]

Rebecca D'arcy James Cook University [email protected]

LIST OF DELEGATES

2018 ISGA XIII 42

Name Institution Email

Lior David The Hebrew University of Jerusalem [email protected]

Hugues de Verdal CIRAD [email protected]

Phillip Dettleff Universidad de Chile [email protected]

Ken Dodds AgResearch [email protected]

Jose Domingos James Cook University [email protected]

Dhara Dunham Auburn University [email protected]

Rex Dunham Auburn University [email protected]

Thuy Yen Duong Can Tho University, [email protected]

Jorge Fernandes Nord University [email protected]

Justin Forrester Coral Coast Barramundi [email protected]

Clemence Fraslin INRA / SYSAAF [email protected]

Yuanshuai Fu Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Bruria Funkenstein Israel Oceanographic & Limnological Research [email protected]

Reiko FuseyaNational Research Institute of Fisheries Engineering, Fisheries Research Agency [email protected]

Renee Gallagher AGRF [email protected]

Trina Falck Galloway AquaGen AS [email protected]

Dongya Gao Auburn University [email protected]

Ruijing Geng [email protected]

Erika Giardina Seafarm Queensland Pty Ltd [email protected]

Evgeny Glazov Illumina [email protected]

Julie Goldsbury James Cook University [email protected]

Ronan Griot INRA-SYSAAF [email protected]

Jarrod Guppy James Cook University [email protected]

MD Mehedi Hasan The University of Sydney [email protected]

Justin Hasell NuGen [email protected]

Ben Hayes University Of Queensland [email protected]

Jason Hein LGC [email protected]

Alexandre Hilsdorf University of Mogi das Cruzes [email protected]

LIST OF DELEGATES

2018 ISGA XIII 43

Name Institution Email

Tiago Hori Center for Aquaculture Technologies [email protected]

Sho Hosoya University of Tokyo [email protected]

Ross Houston The Roslin Institute [email protected]

Roger Huerlimann James Cook University [email protected]

Marc Vandeputte INRA [email protected]

Wayne Hutchinson FRDC [email protected]

Takashi Ishikawa National Research Institute of Aquaculture, FRA [email protected]

Kasper Janssen Wageningen University [email protected]

Cara Jeffrey James Cook University [email protected]

Dean Jerry James Cook University [email protected]

Lingjuan Jia Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Michael Joubert Abalone Genetics [email protected]

Melissa Joyce James Cook University [email protected]

Ajith Karayalage University of the Sunshine Coast [email protected]

Antti Kause Natural Resources Institute Finland [email protected]

Jun KawaiRIKEN Preventive Medicine and Diagnosis Innovation Program [email protected]

Tara Kelly The University of Melbourne [email protected]

Nima Khalilisamani The University of Sydney [email protected]

Mehar Khatkar The University of Sydney [email protected]

James Kijas CSIRO [email protected]

Kiyoshi Kikuchi University of Tokyo [email protected]

Shannon Kjeldsen James Cook University [email protected]

Lene Kleppe Institute of Marine Research [email protected]

Panagiotis Kokkinias Roslin Institute, University of Edinburgh [email protected]

Basiita Komugisha WorldFish Zambia [email protected]

Jie KongYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences [email protected]

Gopala Krishna Seafarm Queensland Pty Ltd [email protected]

Peter Kube CSIRO [email protected]

Renate Kvingedal Cargill [email protected]

Hyukjae Kwon Jeju National University [email protected]

LIST OF DELEGATES

2018 ISGA XIII 44

Name Institution Email

Delphine Lallias INRA [email protected]

Cuong Le University of the Sunshine Coast [email protected]

JeHee Lee Jeju National University [email protected]

Sukkyoung Lee Jeju National University [email protected]

Tom Levy Ben-Gurion University [email protected]

Hengde Li CAFS [email protected]

Qi Li Ocean University of China [email protected]

Xu-Fang Liang Huazhong Agricultural University [email protected]

Woei Liew Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory [email protected]

Marie Lillehammer Nofima AS [email protected]

Sixin Liu USDA-ARS-NCCCWA [email protected]

Yang LiuYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences [email protected]

Zhanjiang Liu Syracuse University [email protected]

Shikai Liu Ocean University of China [email protected]

Sixin Liu USDA-ARS-NCCCWA [email protected]

Yang LiuYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences [email protected]

Bao Lou Zhejiang Ocean University [email protected]

Shannon Loughnan Mainstream Aquaculture [email protected]

Terje Lund [email protected]

Haitao Ma South China Sea Institute of Oceanology [email protected]

Yuejiao Ma Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Stanley Madu Easy Farms and Integrated Services Nigeria [email protected]

Claudia Manosalva Marine Harvest Chile [email protected]

Graham Mair FAO [email protected]

Paulino Martínez Universidad de Santiago de Compostela [email protected]

Barbara Masin Microchips Australia Trovan [email protected]

Cecile Massault James Cook University [email protected]

Sean McDonald Geneworks [email protected]

Xianhong MengYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences [email protected]

Samuel Bekele Mengistu Wageningen University [email protected] Martinez Moncada Universidad de Chile [email protected]

LIST OF DELEGATES

2018 ISGA XIII 45

Name Institution Email

Loïc Monteil Barramundi Asian [email protected]

Juan Montenegro AGRF [email protected]

Ivonne Lee Montero Universidad Santo Tomas [email protected]

Romain Morvezen SYSAAF [email protected]

Natalie Shepherd Illumina [email protected]

Masamichi Nakajima Tohoku University [email protected]

Uthairat Na-Nakorn Kasetsart University [email protected]

Maria Nayfa James Cook University [email protected]

Chan Nguyen University of the Sunshine Coast [email protected]

Thu Nguyen University of Tasmania [email protected]

Thi Hong Nguyen University of Newcastle [email protected]

Tansyn Noble James Cook University [email protected]

Kazuharu NomuraFisheries Research and Education Agency National Research Institute of Aquaculture [email protected]

Kristin Nunn James Cook University [email protected]

Konrad Ocalewicz University of Gdansk [email protected]

Hiroyuki Okamoto National Research Institute of Aquaculture [email protected]

Hiromi Oku National Research Institute of Aquaculture [email protected]

Koichi Okuzawa National Research Institute of Aquaculture [email protected]

Ingrid Olesen Nofima [email protected]

Arjan Palstra Wageningen University [email protected]

YNIV PALTI United States Department of Agriculture [email protected]

Mohini Paltil Thermo Fisher Scientific [email protected]

Felipe Pazo Universidad Nacional de Rosario [email protected]

Carolina Penaloza Roslin Institute [email protected]

David Penman Stirling University [email protected]

Chontida Phuthaworn University of the Sunshine Coast [email protected]

Francesc Piferrer ICM [email protected]

Supawadee Poompuang Kasetsart University [email protected]

Ravindra Ramadhar Thermofisher [email protected]

Clint Rhode Department of Genetics, Stellenbosch University [email protected]

Rodney Roberts Shellfish Production and Technology NZ Ltd [email protected]

Nick Robinson Nofima and The University of Melbourne [email protected]

LIST OF DELEGATES

2018 ISGA XIII 46

Name Institution Email

Diego Robledo The Roslin Institute (University of Edinburgh) [email protected]

Guillermo Rodriguez Universidad Santo Tomas [email protected]

Maria Romana-Eguia SEAFDEC [email protected]

Takashi SakamotoTokyo University of Marine Science and Technology [email protected]

Eitaro Sawayama Marua Suisan Co., Ltd. [email protected]

Lize Schoonbee Aqunion Pty Ltd [email protected]

Yubang Shen Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Yukinori Shimada National Research Institute of Aquaculture, FRA [email protected]

Catarina Silva James Cook University [email protected]

Brett Smith Coral Coast Barramundi [email protected]

Anna Sonesson Nofima [email protected]

Witsanu Sramai Kasetsart University [email protected]

Prapansak Srisapoome Kasetsart University [email protected]

Jason Stannard Center for Aquaculture Technologies [email protected]

Jan Strugnell James Cook University [email protected]

Sila Sukhavachana Kasetsart University [email protected]

Jane Symonds Cawthron Institute [email protected]

Andrew Szentirmay Gene Target Solutions [email protected]

Yutaka Takeuchi Faculty of Fisheries, Kagoshima University [email protected]

Sean Tan LGC [email protected]

Cheryl Tan James Cook University [email protected]

Tomer Ventura University of the Sunshine Coast [email protected]

Klara Verbyla CSIRO [email protected]

Marjolein Verweij Hendrix Genetics Aquaculture B.V. [email protected]

Rodrigo Vidal Universidad de Santiago de Chile [email protected]

Sandra Villamil James Cook University [email protected] Thi Thanh Vu James Cook University [email protected]

Nick Wade CSIRO Agriculture and Food [email protected]

Seumas Walker Cawthron Institute [email protected]

Le Wang Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory [email protected]

LIST OF DELEGATES

2018 ISGA XIII 47

Name Institution Email

Zhan Wei Zhejiang Ocean University [email protected]

Jarrod Wells Huon Aquaculture [email protected]

Cormac Whelehan Thermo Fisher Scientific [email protected]

Aaron Wingrove SALTAS [email protected] Woldemariam Oslo Metropolitan University [email protected]

Dongdong XuMarine Fishery Institute of Zhejiang Province, Zhejiang Ocean University [email protected]

Peng Xu Xiamen University [email protected]

Xiaoyan Xu Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Yixin Xu Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Jose Manuel Yanez Universidad de Chile [email protected]

Hyerim Yang Jeju National University [email protected]

WAN ZI YI Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory [email protected]

Hong Yu Ocean University of China [email protected]

Ruihai Yu Ocean University of China [email protected]

Ziniu Yu South China Sea Institute of Oceanology [email protected]

Gen Hua Yue Temasek Life Sciences Lab [email protected]

Kyall Zenger James Cook University [email protected]

Yang zhang South China Sea Institute of Oceanology [email protected]

Xiaodong Zheng Ocean University of China [email protected]

Qian ZhouYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences [email protected]

Jiayi Zhou Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Qian ZhouYellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences [email protected]

Shu-Ming Zou Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

Yi Zou Shanghai Ocean University [email protected]

LIST OF DELEGATES