By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE - Biologists are encouraging Mississippi catfish
producers to control snails in ponds to combat a parasite
that caused some severe fingerling losses last
year. 1999 was
the first year this internal parasite, a trematode
tentatively identified as Bolbophorus confusus, was
found in Mississippi Delta channel catfish. It is rarely
fatal to large catfish, but it can kill young catfish, or
fingerlings. Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station biologists at
the Thad Cochran National Warmwater Aquaculture Center in
Stoneville monitored the problem when it first surfaced in
the Delta region. A producer brought diseased fish in for
diagnosis, and tests showed that 28 of his 32 ponds were
infected with trematodes, 10 severely. Further
tests in six Delta counties found the problem in each county
with 12 of the 14 farms examined testing positive for
trematode infestations that varied greatly in severity. The
trematode problem was first seen in Louisiana where it has
caused severe fingerling mortality and farm production
losses. Jim
Steeby, area aquaculture agent with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said the parasite appears to
have a life cycle that starts with the white pelican, moves
into the ram's horn snail and from there it infects catfish
in commercial production. The cycle is complete when the
catfish are eaten by pelicans. "In
larger fish, it possibly diminishes some appetite, causing
the fish to not grow as well," Steeby said. "But as the
parasite develops under the skin of the smaller fish, it
appears to cause liver and kidney damage, and kills many
fingerlings." MSU
researchers with MAFES and the College of Veterinary
Medicine are trying to find a way to break the parasite's
life cycle and prevent catfish losses. To date, it appears
that if catfish ponds can be cleared of snails, or their
numbers greatly reduced, the trematode will be
controlled. MSU
researchers are hoping to prevent a widespread problem in
Mississippi. The trematode appears to infect fingerlings at
much higher rates than it does larger catfish. Dr.
Lester Khoo, CVM veterinarian working in the fish diagnostic
laboratory at the Thad Cochran National Warmwater
Aquaculture Center, said the high numbers of deaths of
trematode-infected catfish may indicate the catfish is an
adopted host and not the true host. "We're
trying to understand why these fish are dying," Khoo said.
"Normally you don't get such high mortality with a parasite
as they usually are better adapted to the host." Khoo is
also trying to determine what affect sub-lethal doses of the
trematode have on catfish and whether the parasite
suppresses the catfishes' appetites as suspected. Another
area of interest is identifying the adult form of the
trematode. The Extension aquaculture agent said this is
harder than it sounds because adult birds, such as the white
pelican, carry a variety of parasites in their body,
including more than one type of trematode. "We're
trying to document the life cycle on this parasite and we're
missing the adult stage," Steeby said. Once the
adult form is identified, researchers can determine if it is
being spread by other fish-eating birds. Dr. Linda Pote is
conducting this work at MSU's veterinary college with
assistance from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture. "If you
get more birds and snails infected, the fish-eating birds
migrate and move around so much that pretty soon you could
have the potential for large numbers of infected ponds,"
Steeby said. MAFES
aquaculture center researchers Drs. Jeff Terhune and David
Wise are monitoring the parasite and its spread in
Mississippi to date. They also are working on ways to rid
ponds of snails. Hydrated lime and copper sulfate
applications near the pond edges seem to offer the most
promise. "We've
found an effective treatment is 50 pounds of hydrated lime
per 75 feet of levee," Terhune said. "That treats just the
pond margins, a swath about 2-feet wide around the
pond." Such a
treatment uses about one ton of hydrated lime per 15-acre
pond at a cost of about $200. Catfish producers should begin
treatments if they see any pelican activity around their
ponds and if they have significant snail numbers. "If
those two factors are in place, they need to start treating
the ponds," Terhune said. Steeby
said snail control appears to be the current best line of
defense. "We're
trying to raise the awareness of the farmers and get them
into snail treatment programs for this spring so we don't
have any severe fingerling losses," Steeby said. Released:
Feb. 14, 2000
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Parasite
Threatens Mississippi Catfish
Contact: Jim Steeby, (662) 247-2915; Dr. Jeff Terhune, (662)
686-9311; and Dr. Lester Khoo, (662) 686-3305
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:34
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