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Nailing the Snail That Harbors a Fish Parasite
But its appearance isn't what makes an impression on catfish farmers. The pelican also unwittingly harbors a small parasitic flatworm that—once it makes its way into channel catfish—can have a big financial impact on the Delta catfish industry. The flatworm, Bolbophorus confusus, lives in the bird's intestinal tract. Eggs from the flatworm are shed into channel catfish ponds, where they hatch and form larvae that infect an intermediate host, the ram's-horn snail, Planorbella trivolvis. Once the larvae multiply and mature inside the snail, they exit and find fish to infect. The cycle begins again when a pelican eats an infected fish and the flatworm reaches maturity inside the bird. "It's
called a complex life cycle," says Andrew J. Mitchell, a fishery biologist
at the Harry K. Dupree Stuttgart National Aquaculture Research Center in
Stuttgart, Arkansas. "The flatworm must have all three hosts to continue.
It's interesting that if only one larva penetrates a snail, it can multiply
into tens of thousands of larvae through asexual reproduction. It doesn't
take a lot to get the cycle going."A ram's-horn snail typically measures slightly more than one-third of an inch across. As a carrier of this deadly fish parasite, it is a strong link in a chain of events leading to extensive losses for catfish farmers. Fish infected with B. confusus develop small cysts in their flesh, often seen as bumps just below the skin. The disease can kill smaller fish, and it lessens the appetites of larger fish not killed. This leads to slower-than-normal growth, which makes them unsuitable for market and susceptible to other diseases. Breaking the Chain
Mitchell determined that if he could reduce the snail population, he
could control the disease by breaking the parasite's life cycle midway
through. The flatworms cannot be transmitted from one fish to another.
Control of the pelican, a nationally protected bird, is not an option. Mitchell developed a chemical combination to target the freshwater snail.
The treatment has proven very effective at reducing the threat of the
parasite to farm-raised channel catfish nationwide, including those in
Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, and most recently California. Channel catfish are the most commonly raised food fish species in the United States. Fingerling, or juvenile catfish, deaths can exceed 90 percent in ponds affected by the flatworm. Mitchell says several farms have lost entire ponds of fry (baby catfish) and fingerlings because of severe infections. Stopping Snails in Their Tracks
The concentrated treatment kills the snails, then quickly dilutes as
it disperses throughout the water, according to Mitchell. The troublesome
flatworms die when their host snails die. Catfish naturally avoid the
treated areas, and by the time the chemical combination spreads throughout
the entire pond, it won't harm them. The formula consists of 10 pounds of copper sulfate plus 1 pound of
citric acid, mixed with at least 70 gallons of water, for each 250 feet
of shoreline. In experimental trials, the treatment was carried in a
110-gallon tank mounted on a tractor and sprayed through a hose. A plastic
pipe at the end of the hose distributes the formula over a strip of land
and water near the pond's edge. Mitchell says that farmers in the field
use 1,000-gallon tanks mounted on trailers to disperse the treatment. Ninety-five to 100 percent of snails were killed in studies when the
water temperature was between 73.4 °F and 86 °F. Treatment effectiveness
and fish safety also depend on variables such as alkalinity and temperature
of the water. Wind speed is a factor, too, because it may stir up the
water so much that the formula is not retained long enough to be effective.
Fish size as well as pond size, shape, and depth also play roles in the
treatment's effectiveness. "Copper sulfate had been commonly used in the past to curb the
growth of troublesome algae blooms in fish ponds," Mitchell says. "The
copper sulfate-citric acid treatment was approved for use against snails
by the Environmental Protection Agency, and it is already being widely
used in Arkansas and Mississippi for this purpose." As a result, Mitchell says, the state of Arkansas has not had a serious
snail infestation since late in the summer of 1999. He says credit can
also be given to Asian black carp, which have been used to eat ram's-horn
snails. But black carp might be restricted because of fears that it will
escape fish ponds, enter natural waters, and consume threatened or endangered
snails and mussels. A lime treatment developed under a cooperative research program at the
Thad Cochran National Warmwater Aquaculture Center in Stoneville, Mississippi,
has also had considerable success as a snail treatment and is being further
evaluated.—By Jim
Core, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff. This research is part of Aquaculture, an ARS National Program (#106)
described on the World Wide Web at http://www.nps.ars.usda.gov. Andrew J. Mitchell is at the USDA-ARS Harry K. Dupree Stuttgart National Aquaculture Research Center, 2955 Highway 130 East, Stuttgart, AR 72160; phone (870) 673-4483, fax (870) 673-7710.
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