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Fish Health Management

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Fish Health Management Dr. Craig Kasper Aquaculture Disease Processes FAS 2253 Fish Health Management GOALS : Prevent introduction of disease to healthy animals. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fish Health Management


1
Fish Health Management
  • Dr. Craig Kasper
  • Aquaculture Disease Processes
  • FAS 2253

2
Fish Health Management
  • GOALS
  • Prevent introduction of disease to healthy
    animals.
  • Prevent propigation of existing disease agents.
  • Production of healthy, high quality fish.

3
Principles of Health Maintenance
  • Maintain conditions which are designed to
    optimize growth, feed conversion, reproduction
    and survival.
  • Intensive aquaculture high numbers, close
    quarters, lots of food!! (optimal?)
  • Enhance natural resistance
  • Well managed fish have healthy immune systems!
  • Healthy fish give rise to healthier offspring!

4
Maintaining Health
  • Inverse relationship between environmental
    quality and disease status of fish
  • Changes occur over time (type of system)
  • Water quality degrades.
  • Fish become more crowded.
  • Emphasis of Health management
  • Physical features of facility
  • Use of genetically improved fish
  • SPF stocks
  • Environmental control
  • Prophylactic/preventative therapy
  • Feed quality and quantity

5
REM Stress
  • Adverse situation that
  • affects the well-being
  • of individual animals...

6
Stress related disease
  • Environmental associated
  • Wild fish are in equilibrium with there
    pathogens.
  • Captive fish are much more effected by changes
    in temp. or water quality due to excessive
    crowding, handling, etc.
  • Microbial diseases
  • Decreased resistance to pathogens
  • Endemic pathogens

7
Location of site
  • Soil, water and fish species must be compatible
  • Chose site properly
  • Pond aquaculture
  • Soil characteristics
  • Drainage

Good, bad, or just ugly??
8
Avoiding exposure
  • Best method to control infectious disease
  • Water is effective at delivering pathogens to
    fish (endemic)
  • Dont feed contaminated feed.

9
Avoiding exposure
  • REM U.S. Title 50?
  • What about other countries?
  • Do they have regulations?
  • Quarantine
  • Isolate fish 2 weeks
  • Eradication of Stocks
  • Last resort!
  • Is it worth it?
  • Can you manage around
  • problem?

10
Avoiding exposure (cont.)
  • Example
  • VHSV (or Egtved) Washington (1989)
  • Destroyed adults that were found to have viru
  • Destroyed juveniles
  • Great lakes (lake trout) Epidermal
    epitheliotropic disease (herpesvirus)
  • Destroyed fish and disinfected contaminated
    facilities
  • Appears to have worked
  • BKD (Wyoming) (1990)
  • Destruction of RBT, lake, CTT, and BrT brood
    stock
  • Based on highly sensitive detection technique
    (ELISA)
  • No evidence for disease
  • Was the cost and consequence greater than the
    value of what was saved?

11
Exposing Dose
  • To be sick, fish must be exposed! If no exposure,
    liklihood of disease greatly reduced.
  • Introduction of disease agent potential
    trouble as we disscussed last time.
  • Once pathogen load increases (due to poor
    resistance) DISEASE
  • Exposing dosage data usually confined to toxicity
    studies.

12
Extent of contact
  • Infection vs Disease?
  • Facultative may live under many conditions
  • Obligate require host to complete life cycle
  • Viruses, some bacteria, and few parasites
  • Route of transmission
  • Oral
  • External
  • Vertical
  • Horizontal
  • Direct exposure
  • Carriers

13
Protection through segregation
  • Young fish/newly hatched fish
  • Only innate immunity
  • Highly suceptable to stress and water quality
  • issues
  • May need medicated feed.
  • Fingerlings
  • Immunity increasing
  • survive poor water quality for short duration.
  • Growout
  • Immune system well established.
  • Approaching market/release size
  • Very resistant to disease
  • Can survive in poorest water quality

14
Addition of new fish
  • Should take needed precautions when adding new
    fish to existing stocks...duh!!
  • Home aquaria
  • or large facilities
  • Again...Quarantine!

15
Breeding and Culling
  • Important in the development of domesticated
    stocks that perform well
  • Improve by selecting for desired traits
  • disease resistance
  • fast growth
  • tolerance of stressors
  • Future possibilities (genetic engineering)
  • Gene manipulation
  • Hybridization/transgenic

16
REM EPC
  • Eradication Kill em all!!
  • Prevention Kill what kills em!!
  • Control Reduction of problem to an
    economically/biologically manageable level
  • Do all you can.
  • Be prepared for the worst.
  • Sometimes fish just get sick!!

17
Anticipating problems
  • Plan ahead.
  • Good health records for each pond.
  • Good observations.
  • Good feed.
  • Water quality/quantity.
  • Stay on top of things!!

18
Fish Health Monitoring
  • Early diagnosis
  • Know what normal is!
  • Know what treatments are available. (and how to
    utilize them.)
  • Know what abnormal is.
  • Remain proactive.

19
Question?
  • You are in charge of fish health monitoring at an
    aquaculture facility.
  • During morning rounds you notice that a first use
    pond containing RBT (50g/fish) is having some
    problems. Fish appear lethargic, and some dark
    fish are observed.
  • What possible problems may be causing this?
  • How would you narrow the possibilities down?
  • You suspect the problem to be disease related,
    what would you do?
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