By
Linda Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi State University researchers are
working to reduce the health challenges mass production of
catfish can bring, which are similar to the issues faced by
other food animals such as poultry and swine. "Anytime
you have intensive management situations, you can have
various outbreaks of disease or parasite problems," said Dr.
Linda Pote, parasitologist with MSU's College of Veterinary
Medicine. "Unfortunately, if producers reduce the numbers of
fish or animals, they also will reduce their chances for
making a profit." Pote
and other researchers based in Starkville and at the Thad
Cochran National Warmwater Aquaculture Center in Stoneville
have been working to improve health for the state's catfish
industry. The primary challenges are proliferative gill
disease, commonly referred to as hamburger gill disease, and
trematodes, the top two catfish production
problems. Proliferative
Gill Disease... PGD is
one of the most commonly diagnosed problems of catfish in
the southeastern United States. The disease causes severe
gill damage leading to suffocation of the fish, with severe
outbreaks often resulting in mortalities in excess of 50
percent. Diagnosed
cases of PGD have been on the rise in recent years, with the
growth attributed to weather conditions and increased
awareness. "Our
efforts to study PGD took seven to 10 years for us to figure
out how the parasite gets into the gills," Pote
said. The
cause of PGD is a myxozoan parasite, which requires an
oligochaete worm as a host for part of its life cycle. Pote
joined Dr. Larry Hanson, molecular biologist with MSU's CVM,
to settle the life cycle questions. "Once
Dr. Larry Hanson and I established its life cycle using
molecular techniques, we could start looking for ways to
protect the fish and get PGD under control. We needed to
determine the environmental susceptibility and the age of
infection," Pote said. "One approach for reducing the
disease would be to break the life cycle of the parasite by
eliminating the worms from the ponds." Problems
can happen in a brand new pond within the first year or
ponds can go for years with subclinical infections. Testing
gills is the primary way PGD is detected. David
Wise, associate fisheries biologist in Stoneville, said
researchers are focusing on management strategies to reduce
losses associated with this disease. "So
far, chemical treatments have not been extremely effective
in controlling the disease," Wise said. "Chemicals currently
approved for aquaculture use do not appear to have much
effect on the spores that cause PGD or on the Dero worms
that harbor the spores." Epidemiological
studies conducted at the Thad Cochran center indicate that
essentially all ponds have this disease, but vary in
severity. "Seasonal
changes also appear to influence the severity and number of
outbreaks, with the most severe cases being observed in May
and June," Wise said. "Newly stocked fish are very
susceptible to this disease and account for the majority of
losses associated with PGD." Wise
said "sentinel fish" are used to assess the risk or
potential for severe outbreaks. Adopting this type of
monitoring program can reduce PGD-related fish deaths in
newly stocked ponds. Catfish's
other nemesis, trematodes (Bolbophorus confusus), are not
easy to manage either, but they are more manageable than
PGD. Trematodes... Wise
said the key to controlling this species of trematode is
reducing ram's horn snail numbers and keeping fish-eating
birds such as pelicans off ponds. Outbreaks of trematodes,
which is "an emerging disease," were first documented in
1999 in the Delta and numbers are increasing. The
trematode life cycle is complex and involves several
intermediate hosts. It begins when the final host, usually
fish-eating birds, release eggs into ponds containing other
intermediate hosts. Ram's horn snails serve as the next
hosts and the larval trematodes they release straight into
the water infect fish. Pelicans eat the infected fish and
the life cycle continues. "If
you've got pelicans in the area or if the pond is remote and
people are not available to keep pelicans away, you are at
an increased risk," Wise said. "Weed management also is
important. There are no easy solutions, but every little bit
helps reduce the risk." These
trematodes cause massive damage to the excretory system of
the kidneys and liver of infected fish. Smaller fish appear
to suffer the heaviest losses, however larger fish that
survive develop anorexia and poor growth habits making them
unsuitable for market. Grower's
Perspective... Austin
Jones, a partner in Bear Creek Fisheries in Moorhead, said
PGD is significantly more challenging to manage. "There's
not much managing you can do for PGD; your ponds either get
it or they don't," he said. "You just need to keep the
oxygen up and keep the fish as healthy as you can. With
trematodes, it's different because you have some
options." Jones
said trematodes were having a major economic impact last
year when they wiped out about a third of Bear Creek's
fingerling crop. A catfish producer since 1982, he said 2000
was his first year to suffer losses from
trematodes. "We're
trying to monitor more closely for pelicans and do snail
inventories. We've added triploid black carp, which eat the
snails, and we've treated the banks with hydrated lime to
significantly reduce snail populations." While
he didn't have a major loss to PGD, Jones said the disease
tends to "nickle and dime" growers from their
profits. MSU
researchers used cages to track the occurrence of PGD in
Bear Creak's ponds. They recommended a change from stocking
in the spring, a peak season for PGD, to stocking in
December, January and February. "Stocking
before the peak months seems to improve the fish's ability
to acclimate to the disease," Jones said. Released:
July 16, 2001
Animal
Health
MSU strives for
healthy and profitable catfish
For more information, contact: Dr. Linda Pote, (662)
325-3432
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:37
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm01/010716.html
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