By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Catfish that don't taste right when headed for the
processing plant won't make it to the dinner table until
they do, a setback that costs the industry millions of
dollars a year. Mississippi
processed about 315 million pounds of catfish in 1997,
making catfish one of the top four agribusinesses in the
state. An important reason for the success of the industry
is the consistently mild, sweet flavor of the fish grown in
ponds. Substances
causing the off-flavors in catfish are not toxic, but make
the fish unmarketable. These flavors do go away with time,
but increase the cost of production while the fish are being
held over. Dr.
Craig Tucker, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry
Experiment Station fisheries biologist, works with catfish
pond water quality management. He said off-flavored catfish
increase the cost of production 5 to 20 percent and is a
major marketing problem. "A very
conservative estimate of the cost of off-flavor for
Mississippi farmers is estimated to be $16 million a year,"
Tucker said. Off-flavor
in catfish is any objectionable flavors in the meat.
Consumer satisfaction is jeopardized when off-flavored fish
make it to market. "Producers
consider off-flavor their biggest production-related
problem, and it's been that way since the industry began,"
Tucker said. "Holding fish in inventory while waiting for
the off-flavor to leave fish increases the length of time
needed to raise a crop." This
interruption results in lost income from delayed harvest and
from forfeit of income from missed sales because the
producer cannot restock fish and grow the new
crop. Tucker
is one of just a few scientists studying the problem of
off-flavor in hopes of finding a way to ensure good-tasting
catfish always arrive on the dinner table. Dr. Chris Dionigi
is also working on the problem with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service in New
Orleans. "The
goal of this research is to be able to harvest a select pond
at a predetermined time and know that it is on-flavor,"
Dionigi said. Much of
the off-flavor in catfish is due to the growth of algae in
the ponds. Dionigi said Oscillatoria chalybea is the main
culprit for off-flavor. This algae produces two substances
that cause an earthy flavor in the fish when absorbed by the
gills and prevent the fish from being harvested on
schedule. Harvesting
fish on schedule is very difficult. Catfish ponds are tested
for flavor twice before harvest, but many shipments still
end up being rejected at the processing plant for
off-flavor. "It's
possible for both off- and on-flavor fish to be in the same
ponds over brief periods," Dionigi said. Tucker
said the problem of off-flavor is ancient, dating as far
back as a published account in 1550 of muddy flavor in
certain fish. A method used centuries ago of putting the
fish in clean water to remove the off-flavor is still the
most dependable method used today. Researchers
at MSU and USDA are studying methods of preventing fish from
being off-flavor. Possible solutions to this problem are
being studied, such as using herbicides to kill the
flavor-causing algae and changing ponds' environment so the
algae do not occur. Released:
Nov. 16, 1998
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Off-Flavor
Catfish Cuts Profit Margins
Contact: Dr. Craig Tucker, (601) 686-3286
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:12
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an98/981116ct.htm
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