Title: Catfish Inventory Losses
1Catfish Inventory Losses
- Gary J. Burtle
- Animal Dairy Science
- College of Agricultural Environmental Sciences
- University of Georgia
2You may be loosing catfish every day!
- Losses over the winter
- Losses due to chronic disease
- The effect of holding catfish over time
3Winter Losses
- Fungal diseases
- Winter Kill syndrome
- Parasites
- Poor nutrition
- Cannibalism
4Winter Loss Study
- Fingerlings alone VS Fingerlings on top of 1.5
pound catfish - 4,000 fingerlings /acre
- 1,000 pounds of 1.5 pound catfish per acre
- Stocked in late December
- Harvested in mid-March
- All ponds fed 1 of initial weight per day
5Percentage Over-winter Fingerling Losses ()
6Reasons for Over-winter Survival
- WITHOUT LARGE FISH
- No Cannibalism
- No Residual Disease
- WITH LARGE FISH
- Some Cannibalism
- Protozoan Parasites Carried by Large Fish
- Feed Competition
7Large Fish Survival Over-Winter(Weight, Grams
Survival, )
8Expected Over-Winter Losses(Average of Three
Ponds per Treatment)
- Fingerlings average 69.3 with large catfish
- Fingerlings average 76.2 without large catfish
- Best was 92.7 survival over the three month
period - Large catfish averaged 90.7
9Catfish Lost in the Growing Season (Common Causes)
- Acute Disease
- Chronic Disease
- Water Quality
- Harvest Injury
- Predator Activity
- Theft
10Catfish Losses Observed and Actual During Growing
Season(Losses at Start, Chronic or at End of
Season)
11First Year Harvest Pattern
- 7,500 per acre
- 1.5 pound harvest weight target
- Stocked in May
- Harvested August to November
- Catfish Graded and Returned if Too Small
- 9 ponds compared, 3 catfish only, 3 catfish and
shad, 3 catfish and minnows
12Percent Harvested in First Year
13Yield in First Year
- Early harvest, 3 months, nets few fish
- After 5 months, harvest nearly 50
- 70 to 80 harvested by 7th month
- Average weight 1.25 pounds
- Survival after 7 months 85.7 in 9 ponds
14Pond Yield Verification -Arkansas catfish ponds,
93-96
Source University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff
15Why the difference in survival?
- Pond A used a different source of fingerlings
- Pond B fingerlings were stressed at stocking
- Ponds C and D had proliferative gill disease and
columnaris infestations - Pond D had catfish anemia
16Tips to Improve Survival
- Minimize the time between stocking and harvest
- Stock large and healthy fish
- Avoid winter carry-over
- Feed during the winter
- Utilize a fish health management program
- Seine and grade fish efficiently