By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A short-term study of a common catfish pond
treatment suggests copper sulfate is an environmentally
sound procedure for controlling off-flavor
problems. John
Hargreaves, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment
Station aquaculture biologist with the Thad Cochran National
Warmwater Aquaculture Center, completed a study of the
effects of copper sulfate applications to catfish ponds over
three years. "Copper
sulfate is most often used to kill the blue-green algae that
cause the most common off-flavor in catfish," Hargreaves
said. "It has even been used to treat off-flavor in
reservoirs used to supply drinking water. Copper sulfate is
one of the few approved chemical tools that we have
available to us." Many
farmers now use the chemical diuron to control blue-green
algae. The Environmental Protection Agency and the Food and
Drug Administration granted catfish producers an exemption
last year to use it. However, these agencies reconsider the
exemption every year and renewal is not assured. Copper
sulfate is an approved chemical and its use is not regulated
by these agencies. Without
an approved means of killing the algae that cause
off-flavor, producers with the problem must hold
harvest-ready fish until their flavor becomes acceptable.
Money is lost feeding fish to maintain weights and from
deaths caused by diseases while the fish are
held. When
producers add copper sulfate in low doses, it kills enough
of the blue-green algae that cause off-flavor, but does not
completely eliminate the algae. Algae in ponds are desirable
because they add oxygen to the water and remove some kinds
of fish waste such as ammonia. Hargreaves'
study looked at ponds that had been treated with copper
sulfate at industry-recommended doses for three years and
measured the concentration of copper in pond sediments. This
research was part of a larger project related to an
assessment of treatment methods to reduce off-flavor in
catfish. "We
applied the copper sulfate according to a regime suggested
by catfish farmers," Hargreaves said. "We found that it does
not leave the pond. We could account for all the copper that
was added to the pond. It ends up in a number of different
forms in the soil. Over time, copper changes from forms more
readily available to those that are less readily
available. "The
main finding was that the copper ends up in the soil in
forms that are generally not available to enter the food
chain," Hargreaves said. "Preliminary data on the toxicity
indicated that concentrations of copper measured in the
sediment caused no problems." Researchers
tested for possible toxic effects of the copper by exposing
two sensitive test organisms to sediment from ponds that had
been treated with copper sulfate for three years. They found
no problems when they exposed an aquatic invertebrate and
cattail roots to the soil with elevated copper
concentrations. Results
of this study suggest that older ponds with 10 to 15 years
of copper sulfate applications would likely have high levels
of copper in the sediment. It is likely that none of this
copper will leave the pond and that it will have no negative
effects on the pond's plants, fish or the
environment. Hargreaves
said further research is needed to test this
hypothesis. "In the
time frame of the industry as it exists today, this was a
fairly short-term study," Hargreaves said. "We don't know
the long-term effects of copper sulfate use, but our limited
data suggest that the effects of long-term copper sulfate
applications will be confined within the pond." Results
of this research are being published in an upcoming issue of
the Journal of Environmental Quality. Released:
June 11, 2001
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Study shows
promise for catfish treatment
For more information, contact: Dr. John Hargreaves, (662)
325-0629
Visit: DAFVM
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