Plastic paddles
improve catfish hatchery safety
By
Bonnie Coblentz
MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A catfish hatchery owner with a little time on his
hands developed a cheap and easy solution to a problem that
nags producers.
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Plastic
paddles, designed by catfish hatchery
owner Jerry Nobile of Sunflower County,
can be stopped by hand and are a safer
alternative to those made from metal that
typically are used in hatcheries. The
white paddles, which circulate water and
provide oxygen to the catfish, are cut
from thick plastic barrels and bent to fit
around the rod that moves
them.
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Hatcheries
typically place catfish egg masses in mesh baskets in metal
troughs, and flow water over them with rotating metal
paddles placed between the baskets. The paddles move water
to simulate the care male fish give eggs.
Jim
Steeby, aquaculture specialist with the Mississippi State
University Extension Service, said this technique, while
simple and effective, poses some danger to
workers.
"The
metal paddles rotate at 25 revolutions per minute and may
scratch or cut hatchery workers as they apply egg
disinfection treatments or carry out routine cleaning
tasks," Steeby said. "The metal paddles also can snag
clothing and hair."
Jerry
Nobile, owner of Nobile Fish Farms in Moorhead, said he has
had workers get scratched or clothes hung up in the
machinery, and he wanted a better way to circulate
water.
"One
night I was up at the hatchery and I got to looking around
because I had some time. I knew I had a plastic barrel and a
jigsaw," Nobile said. "I realized I could cut some strips
and bend them into a paddle shape, so I just started
trying."
Nobile
said his new paddles are simple to construct and almost
free. He uses thick plastic barrels for his construction
material, and cuts a 3- to 4-inch-wide strip from them. He
heats one end so it can be bent back on itself, then drills
a hole through the looped end. This end is placed over the
spinning rod, and a bolt attaches the new paddle to the
power shaft. The paddles take advantage of the curve of the
barrel to move more water.
The
catfish specialist said these plastic paddles offer a
significant safety improvement.
"These
paddles can be stopped with pressure applied by hand,"
Steeby said. "Friction holds them in place as they turn with
the spinning pipe, but since they are only looped around the
pipe and not fixed directly to it, they can be stopped by
hand and not harm workers."
Nobile
and his hatchery manager Wayne Wright agreed to give this
information to the catfish industry without regard to
patents or financial return. Nobile said the idea is so
simple that once producers see the new paddle, they can
construct it themselves on their own farms.
Steeby
said some hatcheries have experimented with air stones to
avoid the problems caused by metal paddles, but when used
alone, these don't circulate water as well as paddles or put
enough oxygen in the water. A few hatcheries already have
adopted plastic paddles, and Steeby said he expects most in
the industry eventually will switch to them.
"People
will change to the plastic paddles in their hatcheries once
they encounter a problem or have an injury with the
traditional ones," Steeby said. "Metal paddles are a
seasonal, minor safety problem, but over time I expect most
producers to move away from metal paddles."
-30-
Released:
March 17, 2005
Contact: Dr. Jim Steeby, (662) 247-2915
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