EPA grants one-year exemption for pesticide to control catfish parasites
Seafood.com
January 17, 2003
The
Mississippi Department of Agriculture and Commerce has obtained an
emergency exemption from EPA for the use of niclosamide a pesticide
used to control the parasite-hosting rams horn snail. The one-year
exemption was given after concerns that the parasite (a species of
yellow grub trematode) could cause major problems for Delta catfish
producers.
This parasite has the potential to cause million of
dollars in economic loss if we dont control it. The devastation
experienced by the industry could lead to a total economic hardship on
our state economy of at least $350 million a year, said Dr. Lester
Spell, Mississippi agriculture commissioner.
Its estimated that more than half the states 113,500 acres of catfish ponds are threatened by the parasite.
The
parasite uses three pond-loving hosts during its life cycle: pelicans,
snails and fish. It reproduces while living in a pelicans gut, and its
eggs exit with the birds feces. As pelicans often congregate around
catfish ponds, their deposits have easy access their next host, the
rams horn snail.
Once inside the snail, the eggs mature into
larvae and then leave the snail looking for a fish. After the fish are
infected (fingerlings suffer liver and kidney damage due to the
parasite) pelicans will eat them and the cycle continues.
By
using niclosamide a product manufactured by Bayer AG and commercially
known as Bayluscide to control snails and interrupt the parasites life
cycle, its hoped the threat to aquaculture will be lessened, Spell said.