1 / 31

Bacterial Diseases

Bacterial Diseases. ESC and Columnaris. These two bacterial diseases are the most common and most devastating bacterial problems in the commercial catfish industry. Estimated economic losses resulting from these diseases is millions of dollars. ESC. Enteric Septicemia of Catfish (ESC).

kylia
Download Presentation

Bacterial Diseases

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bacterial Diseases

  2. ESC and Columnaris • These two bacterial diseases are the most common and most devastating bacterial problems in the commercial catfish industry. • Estimated economic losses resulting from these diseases is millions of dollars

  3. ESC

  4. Enteric Septicemia of Catfish (ESC) • Causative agent - Edwardsiella Ictaluri • Gram Negative, rod shaped, weakly motile • Thought to be obligate but can survive in mud for 90 days. • Similar to Edwardsiella Tarda

  5. Which fish can get ESC? • Channel catfish most susceptible • White catfish, brown bullhead, walking catfish are also susceptible • Blue catfish can get it but are generally resistant

  6. Which fish can get ESC? • Esc has been isolated from some diseased tropical fish. • Trout, salmon and tilapia have been experimentally infected but natural outbreaks have not been reported.

  7. Clinical Signs • Behavior • Tail chasing or spiraling • Star gazing (head up tail down) • Stop eating

  8. Clinical Signs • External Signs • Red and white ulcers • petecial hemorrhages (pin point size) • Raised pimples (buckshot appearance) • Hole or lightened area on head • Exopthalmia • Swollen belly

  9. External Signs

  10. Petechial Hemorrhaging (Buckshot appearance)

  11. Deteriorating Skull Cartilage

  12. ESC “Hole in the Head”

  13. Clinical Signs • Internal Signs • Clear - straw colored or bloody fluid in body cavity • Mottled liver • Petechial hemorrhages in muscle • Intestine often filled with bloody fluid

  14. Diagnosing ESC • Look at behavioral and external signs • Necropsy for internal signs • Isolate bacteria from internal organs • run diagnostic tests • determine antibiotic sensitivity

  15. Causes of ESC • Combination • Pathogen - virulent Edwardsiella ictaluri • Stress • Environment - that favors rapid proliferation of the bacteria • Generally in the “ESC Window” 68 - 82 degrees F

  16. How Does ESC Spread • Enters through • Gut • Nares • Gills • Transmitted through water • Transmitted by cannibalism • Transmitted by carrier fish, equipment and birds

  17. Treatment and Prevention • Prevention by reducing stress • not always possible • Nutritional supplements • Winter Feeding • Genetic improvement • Vaccination • Treatment with medicated feeds

  18. Medicated Feed Treatment of ESC • Romet 30 and Romet B • sulfadinethoxine and ormetoprim • Fed at recommended rate for 5 days • 3 day withdrawal period • Terramycin • Fed at recommended rate for 10-14 days • 21 day withdrawal period

  19. Economic Evaluation • Need to make sure that treating the fish does not cost more than the fish are worth

  20. Other Methods of Control • Withhold Feed • Wait for temperature change • Vaccines

  21. Columnaris

  22. Causes of Columnaris • Causative agent - Flexibacter columnaris • Gram negative, rod shaped and motile • Non Obligate - present in the natural environment • Stress - particularly in warm weather • Especially long term exposure to low levels of toxic ammonia

  23. Characteristics of the Disease • Rarely occurs unless fish are stressed • Most frequently occurs between March and October when water temperatures are above 59F especially in the 75 -85 degree range • Can be external, internal or both

  24. Characteristics of the Disease • Chronic at lower temperatures and more acute at higher temperatures. • Likely to reoccur if original stress is not removed • All ages, sizes and species can be effected

  25. Clinical Signs of Columnaris • External • increase in thickness of mucous on skin • saddleback appearance • areas of gray or colorless skin leading to ulcers and open lesions • grey/brown areas on the gills esp. at the tips • yellow colonies inside the mouth • frayed fins

  26. Columnaris ColoniesUsing Skin & Gill Wet Mounts

  27. Columnaris on Gills

  28. Columnaris (Frayed fins, tail rot)

  29. ColumnarisSkin Lesions Leading to Open Ulcers

  30. Diagnosis • External - Microscopic examination of skin and gill wet mounts • Internal - Isolation of bacteria and identification proceedurs

  31. Treatment • Depends on whether the infection is internal or external • External only - 2 to 4 ppm KMnO4 • Internal only - Terramycin • Both - Terramycin

More Related