Title: Fish Health Protocols
1Fish Health Protocols
2Principles of DisinfectionDisinfection process
that reduces or eliminates pathogenic
microorganisms
- Cleaning is the most important step in the
cleaning and disinfection process - Cleaning process has 5 steps
- Dry clean
- Wet wash
- Rinse
- Dry
- Inspect
3Methods of Disinfection
- Physical
- Moist heat
- UV light
- Drying
- Exposure to sunlight
- Chemical
- Chlorines (bleach)
- Iodines (Ovadine)
- Quaternary ammonium compounds (Diquat, Roccal)
- Oxidizing agents (Virkon, Ozone)
4Chemical Disinfectants
- Considerations
- Proven efficacy against pathogens of interest
- Bacteria, virus, protozoans, fungus, spores
- Safety
- Fish, user, equipment, environment
- Affordable
- Other
- Presence of organic matter
- Effects on metals/fabrics/rubber
5Iodophors Hypochlorites Oxidizers Quaternary ammonium compounds
Brand Name Ovadine Chlorine Bleach (12) Virkon/Peroxigard (7) Roccal, benzalkonium chloride
Bactericidal /
Virucidal / _
Lipophilic virucidal /
Sporicidal / _
Fungicidal /
Effectiveness in presence of organic matter /
6 Mechanism of action Iodophors Oxidizes proteins and interferes with metabolic reactions Hypochlorites Free hypochlorous acid attacks sulfur bonds and general structure in microbial enzymes, other proteins Oxidizers O2 release alters protein structure Quat Ammonium Cationic detergents. act against cell wall lipids in bacteria
Usage notes for working solutions (not accurate for concentrate) Safe for skin contact, mild odor, color fades as potency declines, not effective if prepared with seawater Corrosive to skin and metal, strong odor, high risk to fish, volatile, not effective if prepared with seawater Safe for skin contact, mild odor/few volatiles, color fades as potency declines (Virkon), marked drop in efficacy if prepared with seawater Safe for short or occasional skin contact, odorless, some risk to fish, not effective if prepared with seawater
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8Ovadine Egg Disinfection
- Why?
- Vertically transmitted diseases
- On the surface of the egg
- Within an egg
- Disinfecting eggs significantly decreases
pathogen loads - When?
- During water hardening
- After egg shocking and picking
- After eyed eggs are transferred to a site
9Ovadine Egg Disinfection
- How?
- 100 ppm 10 mls of Ovadine per litre of water
- Determine volume of heath tray
- Add appropriate amount of Ovadine to tray full of
water - Gently pour rinsed, fertilized eggs into tray
preloaded with Ovadine solution - After 10 minutes without disturbance, restore
water flow
10Ovadine Egg Disinfection
- 1 volume of eggs 10 volumes of disinfectant
solution - Solution colour indicates efficacy
- Brown active
- Yellow inactive and should be refreshed
- Make a fresh Ovadine solution for each lot of eggs
11Ovadine Egg Disinfection
- Spent solution disposal
- Dilution is standard, combined with hatchery
effluent, or can be disposed to ground - Neutralize
- Sodium thiosulfate
- 0.78 X grams of iodine x 2 (safety factor)
- or 0.15 gm per litre of 100ppm solution
- Water should be colourless before discharge to
ground
12Managing Egg Fungal Infections
- Egg picking
- By hand
- Mechanical pickers
- Chemical treatments
- Formalin (Parasite-STM)
- Hydrogen Peroxide
- Salt
- Bronophol (EDR)
- Malachite Green
13Egg Picking
- Dead eggs are food for fungus
- After shocking eyed eggs observe eggs for
mortalities
14remove dead eggs promptly
15Early remove affected
16Grape cluster remove clumps
17Beyond treatment discard tray
18Formalin Egg Disinfection
- 1670 ppm for 15 20 minutes
- Static bath till last few weeks till hatch
- Then keep water flow gt11 lpm
- Hanging IV bags or chicken feeders
19Hydrogen peroxide (Perox-Aid)
- 500ppm for 30 35 minutes daily
- Comparatively environmentally benign
- Will not work on established fungal infections
only preventative
20Others
- Salt Robertson Creek every 2 3 days
- Bronophol no benefits vs approved
- Malachite Green absolutely not!
21Sample Shipping to a Diagnostic Facility
- Mortalities are unexpected
- Clinical signs are suggestive of a disease of
concern (eg. popeye and/or swollen abdomens at a
facility with a history of recurrent BKD
infection) - Daily mortality rate exceeds 0.5 of the
population
22Selecting the samples
- Moribund fish preferred
- There may be a need to randomly sample apparently
healthy fish from the population - Ask Fish Path Lab staff re sample type, numbers
and shipping info
23Before shipping
- Collect fish history
- population size
- clinical signs
- mortality and morbidity rate
- diet and feed consumption
- water quality conditions
- records of recent stressful events (e.g. low
water event, marking) - vaccination status
- disease and treatment history
- Fill out a submission form
24Shipping Live Fish
- Line a cooler with ice paks or double bagged ice
- Cover ice with newspaper
- Live fish are added to heavy duty plastic bag
filled ¼ to 1/3 full of aerated ambient water - Oxygen is pumped into the bag to refill it.
- The bag is securely closed off using elastic
bands or tape. Double bag and placed in the
Styrofoam cooler. - Each bag is clearly marked with information
identifying contents. - The remaining space in the cooler is filled with
cubed ice to keep the fish and water cool. - The lid is placed on the Styrofoam cooler and
securely fastened with duct tape to prevent
accidental spillage.
25Shipping
- Include a pathology laboratory submission form or
an accompanying letter with more detail - Include copy of mortality records if available
- Clearly mark sample bags
- The container is addressed to the laboratory at
PBS and is clearly labeled with information as to
originating site. - Contact lab with estimated time of sample arrival
26Shipping fresh dead fish
-
- Fresh morts (red gills, firm flesh) should be
placed in labeled, sealed double plastic bags
without water. - Ship dead fish in a container on ice as described
above for live fish. - Fish should not come in contact with the ice or
freezer packs.