Biosecurity and Fish Health Management for Recirculating Systems
Transcription
Biosecurity and Fish Health Management for Recirculating Systems
Biosecurity and Fish Health Management for Recirculating Systems Julie Bebak‐Williams, VMD, PhD Freshwater Institute Shepherdstown, WV 1 Why are infectious disease outbreaks more likely to occur in the RAS? Fish loading densities greater than those used in pond or serial reuse systems Continuous production strategies Prolonged water retention in system provides extended residence time that allows for growth of opportunistic and overtly virulent pathogens Relatively more stressful environment 2 Why does it matter (costs)? Costs Diagnosis, response, diversion of management and labor, underutilization of production facility Direct losses from mortality Reduced quality of survivors Inability to replace stock Restricted market for healthy stock because of damage to reputation and missed markets Restriction of movement orders Facility closure orders Running a facility without a biosecurity and fish health management plan will result in these costs when an infectious disease outbreak occurs. Note also that the higher capital and production costs of recirculating systems means that the consequences of infectious disease outbreaks can be catastrophic. 3 What is biosecurity? 4 Biosecurity Hazard reduction through environmental manipulation (Plumb, 1992) (Operating costs are reduced by minimizing the number and severity of disease outbreaks.) Biosecurity accomplishes hazard reduction through environmental manipulation. Biosecurity cannot completely prevent entry of, or eliminate, all pathogens from a culture facility. Biosecurity accomplished pathogen reduction rather than pathogen elimination. 5 Effective Biosecurity Reduces risk of pathogen introduction Reduces risk that pathogens will spread throughout the facility Reduces conditions that increase susceptibility to infection and disease (e.g., reduce stress) 6 What is one strategy for “making up” for losses? Add extra fish. 7 100,000 at Start Pathogen Dose Starting Fish Density <0.11 lbs/gal 0.11-0.21 lbs/gal 0.22-0.34 lbs/gal 1 Inf 76,062 31,595 25,790 2 Inf 37,389 27,449 24,488 3 Inf 26,703 30,201 22,466 Can we compensate for losses to infectious disease by adding more fish to the system? No. Numbers in cells of table are the number of fish left at the end of an outbreak for a given starting fish density and pathogen dose. If we start with 100,000 fish, we have fewer left over at the end of the outbreak in the higher fish densities for a given pathogen dose (and higher pathogen doses for a given fish density) 8 Death rate (%/day) Effect of Pathogen Dose 16 14 12 10 1 Inf 2 Inf 3 Inf All Inf 0 Inf 8 6 4 2 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 Time (days) Example from an experiment evaluating the relationship between fish density and pathogen dose. This graph shows what happens to the death rate when the pathogen dose increases from 0 to 1,2,3 or all infectious fish added to varying densities of susceptible fish. The value for the death rate peaks gradually higher at 5.2, 5.9, 6.2 and 14.9 %/day for 1, 2, 3 and All Inf, respectively. The peak death rate occurs earlier and earlier 26, 25, 24 and 13 days for 1, 2, 3 and All Inf, respectively. 9 Rule of Thumb Every producer that transports fish directly from a pond into a recirculating system will experience catastrophic losses from infectious disease outbreaks 10 Opportunistic vs. Obligate Pathogens Obligate pathogens Require animal host to replicate Viruses (IPNV, IHNV, VHSV and OMV in salmonids); bacteria (bacterial (bacterial kidney disease, furunculosis?, furunculosis?, enteric redmouth disease) Opportunistic pathogens Do not require animal host to replicate – nutrition from organic material Naturally occur in soil and water May also be part of the natural microbial population in the fish (e.g., the gastrogastrointestinal tract) Includes the species associated with bacterial gill disease, coldwater coldwater disease, columnaris disease, and the motile aeromonads. aeromonads. Opportunistic parasites include Trichodina, Trichodina, Chilodonella, Chilodonella, Ichthyobodo? Ichthyobodo?, Epistylis and Ambiphyra. Ambiphyra. The fungi can also be considered opportunistic pathogens. 11 Biosecurity planning starts at the facility design stage Includes consideration of Placement of doors Placement of disinfection areas Ventilation – to control insects, dust and aerosol transfer (also can use barriers) 12 Facility design Reduce noise and vibration Arrange tanks so that they are easily accessible Ability to take individual tanks and unit processes off line for cleaning or chemical treatment Construction materials – non-porous and easy to clean and disinfect (plastic, metal, PVC) Avoid use of wood (consider disposable) Never transfer equipment to or from another site 13 Circular Tanks & Solids Removal Advantages: self cleaning rapid solids fractionation uniform environment optimum rotational velocity for swimming fish flow distributes feed & fish Solids fractionation – rapidly moving settleable solids to center drain so they don’t move out of side drain – leaves tank in 1 to 2 minutes and 5 minutes in a 30 foot tank Create uniform environment as far as mixing, equal DO, Co2 ammonia Optimal rotational velocity – 0.5 to 2.0 body lengths per second (12-30 cm/sec) compared to raceway which is much lower than 0.5 (2-4 cm/sec) Flow distributes feed and fish more evenly around the tank 14 Circular Tanks w/o Rotation Solids must be “mucked-out” of tank. 15 Design features should be easy and convenient to use White River NFH Top of CO2 stripper at White River NFH Designed by Brian, 8 feet diameter Constructed of panels with handles that are easy to remove and easier to clean, can do while in operation 16 Clean Outs and Cone-bottom Unit Processes Solids should not build up in any part of system: system: Easy to clean Unit processes (CO2 stripper, LHO, biofilter) designed to be cleaned (e.g., conecone-bottom, ability to drain) Include features to ease solids removal from system (e.g., clean outs) Example of a cleanout – very important! 17 Clean-Outs for Ozone Contacting 13-40 min O3 Destruct 6-20 min O3 Contact ozonated inlet Stripping Column Fan sediment trap sediment trap to culture tanks Foam & O3 Off-Gas Separator Floor drain Lamar NFH (PA) Note also cone-shaped unit processes that facilitates collection and emptying. 18 Clean-Out Locations in all Sumps CO2 & O2 Control cascade aeration column (Summerfelt et al., 2000) LHO Note the clean outs in the LHO sump and the CO2 stripper From the LHO sump to the fish tanks. An example of how you can take a unit process off line. 19 Isolation of system components Tanks and unit processes that can be taken off line & drained out of system For cleaning while the rest of the system is operating, then discharge out of the system For chemical treatment of individual tanks, discharge to a chemical drain 20 Bypass Piping Drain piping should be plumbed to allow drum filter bypass to direct flow to: drum filter pump sump Drain (away from RAS) during cleaning events Pump sump When filter servicing drum drain 21 Bypass Piping Clean-outs with valves were installed at the end of every pipe run. Discharge tank & pipe cleaning flows into floor trench. MCRA Hatchery, Delbarton, WV 22 Sump Design Sump design with no standing water White River Nat’l Fish Hatchery Sump on left side doesn’t drain, would be better if it slopes and collects to a drain Properly sized pipes move solids away from the system, used to be 8”, but now 4”. Dam boards were present with the 8” pipes, moved out dam boards and replaced with 4 inch so the whole thing drained more efficiently Solids will settle where there are dead zones and low velocity pipes so removed dead zones and increased velocity to remove solids 23 Fish health monitoring allows early detection of a problem Tank windows Two locations where healthiest fish would be where sick fish would congregate 24 Mort Removal Design features to remove dead fish “Mort Flush” Flush” Quantify mortality Reduce pathogen load on system Remove weak/moribund fish for examination 25 Unit processes in separate building White River NFH 26 Avoid use of wood, unless disposable Equipment used for sequential cohorts PVC sheets instead of wood sheets 27 Metal 28 Plastic Inexpensive & Easy to Disinfect 29 I. Practices to Reduce the Risk of Pathogen Introduction 30 Water Supply Specific-pathogen free (SPF) groundwater supply For both well and spring water Investigate possibility of surface water input (depends on surrounding surrounding geology and depth Test both before purchase of the property Should be constructed to protect from surface water input and entry of animals (e.g., invertebrates, amphibians, reptiles, mammals, birds) that could be carriers of pathogens If surface water must be used, then it must be disinfected 31 Eggs and Fish Specific-pathogen-free certified eggs/fish Eggs disinfected upon arrival Quarantine new fish, certified or not Avoid introduction of delivery water 32 Feed Live food Presents a serious risk of contamination with pathogens -should be cultured as specificspecific-pathogenpathogen-free, never used directly from the natural environment Commercial dry feeds SteamSteam-pelleted – 160160-180 F (71(71-82 C) Expanded – 180180-200 F (82(82-93 C) Extruded – 220220-350 F (104(104-177 C) Lyophilized feed Many microorganisms survive lyophilization well 33 People Management Frequent washing of hands and arms with antibacterial soap should be standard practice Strategically schedule culture activities (work on most vulnerable stages first, minimize number of personnel working on a group of fish, leave sick for last) Disinfect vehicles before driving up to facility 34 People Management (cont.) Visitor parking at periphery of facility grounds Restrict facility access to a minimum number of people Minimize number of tours and limit to small, easily managed groups Maintain log book Visitors (not at aquaculture facility w/in past 48 hours) – coveralls over clothing, disinfected boots, wash with antibacterial soap for 30 seconds 35 Visitor Control Can use signs, rope and cones to control visitor and personnel movement 36 People Management (cont.) Visitors (at aquaculture facility w/in past 48 hours) – remove clothes, put on coveralls and disinfected boots, wash with antibacterial soap Instruct visitors not to touch, or lean on, anything in culture room Change footbaths and disinfect floors after every tour 37 Footbath Incorrect use of a footbath – dirty boots and footbath is almost dry. Footwear going in should be clean and foot bath solution should be clean and at least one to two inches above the top of the material in the footbath 38 Quarantine Planned early in the design of the facility Separate building, room or area with independent, isolated culture system Q period accounts for incubation and development times for targeted pathogens Water temperature kept at upper end of fish species optimum range to speed up pathogen life cycles 39 Quarantine (cont.) Observe new arrivals for abnormalities in appearance and behavior, sample and examine Throughout Q period, sample normal and abnormal fish, examine Hold fish at culture densities they will encounter in production system 40 Quarantine (cont.) Wash hands and arms before going between quarantine and production area. Disinfect footware. Change clothing. Save work in Q area as last element of the work day Use Q equipment only in the Q area Acclimate fish to production system water by introducing it to quarantine before transfer out of quarantine 41 II. Practices to Reduce Pathogen Spread 42 Meticulous husbandry An example of a dirty system 43 Husbandry Install deep foot baths, clean and change frequently Wash hands and arms before entering fish culture area and as change work with groups of fish Easily accessible disinfectant and rinse areas (e.g., for buckets, nets, meters) 44 Disinfection area Three sink method: First sink for dirty equipment and for hand washing, second sink has disinfect and third sink is for rinsing disinfected equipment only Trash cans: One has disinfectant, the other is the rinse, with constant flow of water through it 45 Husbandry (cont.) Store clean equipment in a clean area Meticulous husbandry procedures Even for recycle loop, treat each tank as a discrete rearing unit, minimize potential for crosscontamination Disinfect tanks and equipment before use with a different group of fish 46 Husbandry (cont.) Regard floor as contaminated, manage accordingly Clean floors frequently Inspect and clean all parts of system frequently Exclude pets, rodents, birds, other vertebrates and insects from culture area 47 Definitions Surfactant – 'SURFace ACTive AgeNT' AgeNT' - a molecule that lowers suface tension; contain both hydrophobic and hydrophilic components so are semisemi-soluble in both organic and aqueous solvents; the hydrophobic component sticks to grease and dirt while the hydrophilic section section sticks to the water; active ingredient in soap Disinfectant – eliminates virtually all recognized pathogenic microorganisms; an agent that kills or inactivates >99.99% of disease disease causing microorganisms, may not kill spores Sanitizer – an agent that decreases the load of microorganisms (not necessarily pathogenic) 48 Surfactant Example “Simple Green” Cleaner and degreaser Listed as nonhazardous, nonnon-mutagenic, nonnon-carcinogenic On a scale of 1 to 4, ranked as 1 for slight health hazard because because it can be a mild eye irritant (mucous membrane irritation concentrate mist) mist) No special ventilation is required during use Meets EPA and OECD recommendations for ready biodegradability; practically nonnon-toxic per EPA’ EPA’s aquatic toxicity scale Components on TSCA Chemical Substance Inventory OECD – Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development 49 Disinfectants Factors affecting disinfection process Type Concentration Temperature Contact Time pH Presence of soil/organic matter Number of organisms Type and growth phase of organism 50 Iodophor Broad spectrum (inactivates IPNV)? No Inactivated by soil/organic matter? Yes, but turns yellow & is more stable than chlorine NonNon-toxic fish? Depends on dilution NonNon-toxic humans? Skin and eye irritation Corrosive? Slightly Surfactant activity? No Leaves active residue? Yes Stable? Dissipates slowly Tests for active chemical residues? Test strips Safe for environment Regs 51 Quaternary Ammonium Compounds (QACs) Broad spectrum (inactivates IPNV)? Inactivated by soil/organic matter? NonNon-toxic fish? NonNon-toxic humans? Corrosive? Surfactant activity? Leaves active residue? Stable? Tests for active chemical residues? Safe for environment No Moderately stable Depends on dilution Corrosive to skin and eyes; Irritation of respiratory tract; headache, drowsiness No Yes Yes Yes Test strips Regs 52 Hypochlorite (HTH) Broad spectrum (inactivates IPNV)? Inactivated by soil/organic matter? NonNon-toxic fish? NonNon-toxic humans? Corrosive? Surfactant activity? Leaves active residue? Stable? Tests for active chemical residues? Safe for environment Yes Yes Extremely toxic at low concentrations Dust causes skin, eye, digestive tract and respiratory burns Yes, to metals and plastics V. slight No No, dissipates rapidly Test strips Regs (must be neutralized with sodium thiosulfate) 53 Virkon-S (potassium monopersulfate) Broad spectrum (inactivates IPNV)? Inactivated by soil/organic matter? NonNon-toxic fish? NonNon-toxic humans? Corrosive? Surfactant activity? Leaves active residue? Stable? Tests for active chemical residues? Safe for environment Yes ? Depends on dilution As powder can be respiratory and eye irritant To metals but not netting Yes (including bacterial biofilms) ? Dissipates very slowly ? Regs., Regs., breaks down to harmless organic salt 54 Culling An important strategy to reduce transmission of pathogens Should include sick (as long as cause is infectious) as well as dead fish Cull at least once per day Fish should be killed humanely, not allowed to die from suffocation 55 Additional Strategies Changing flow to increase turnover rates Density manipulation 56 Culture Activities Minimize the number of different personnel working with a group of fish Unaffected tanks should be worked on before affected tanks Care for young fish before older fish Equipment touching the floor should not contact fish culture water Fish that jump from tank to floor should be humanely killed, not returned to tank 57 III. Practices to Reduce Susceptibility to Infection and Disease 58 Strategies for a Strong Immune System Optimum nutrition Fish should be from optimum year class brood stock Gentle handling to reduce stress and injury Vaccination 59 IV. Monitoring Set up a monitoring and response plan 60 Record Keeping Used to track changes Used to improve biosecurity protocols Includes water quality, feed fed, feed lot numbers, visitors, number of dead and culled fish, observations of abnormalities, laboratory results, results of treatment 61 Monitor Water Quality! 62 Know normal vs. abnormal behavioral and physical signs for stress and illness 63 Behavioral and Physical Signs for Stress/Illness Movement Weak, erratic, lethargic swimming Abnormal reaction to external stimuli such as noise or movement Scratching, flashing, rubbing against tank walls or bottom Twitching, darting, spinning or jumping out of water Crowding at inflent water supply Swimming upside down Gasping at water surface 64 Behavioral and Physical Signs for Stress/Illness Feeding Not feeding Reduced feeding (detected by system TAN and growth curves as well as observation) Breathing Decreased or increased rate of opercular movement 65 Behavioral and Physical Signs for Stress/Illness Physical Condition Visible lesions or sores Cloudy eyes, protruding eyes Gills swollen, white, pink or pale red, eroded, puffy, bloody, brown Scale loss Swollen abdomen Diarrhea Excess mucus on skin/gills (check for excess mucus on tank screens) Spots, fungus on skin Unusual coloration on body surface Flared opercula Frayed fins or tail Bubbles in eyes, skin, gills 66 Submersible Biomass Scanner VAKI DNG (Kópavogur, Iceland) Used to track Arctic char size & growth at CFFI. What principle does the VAKI scanner work on? Infrared diode array note the contour of the fish to get shape profile from top and side – works at 100 kg/m3 67 V. Diagnosis 68 Supplies/Equipment for Fish Health Laboratory Compound microscope (with 10X ocular and 4X, 10X, and 40X objectives) Slides, cover slips Dissecting kit (for large and small fish) Anesthetic (e.g., tricaine methane sulfonate (MS-222)) 69 Diagnosis Keep accurate records so that an accurate history can be compiled Learn normal and abnormal appearance and behavior Evaluate water quality Learn skin scrape and gill biopsy techniques to identify parasites Find an aquaculture veterinarian 70 Diagnosis An accurate diagnosis is essential Determines treatment regimen (whether, and which, chemotherapeutants should be used) Treatment based on hunches results in wasted time and money and further degradation of the fish Incorrect diagnosis prevents development of an effective strategy to prevent recurrence 71 Treatment Disease from water quality more likely in a biosecure recirculating system (slow turnover rate) If chemical treatment is necessary, effect on biofilter must be considered (Table 13.3) (design system for biofilter bypass during treatment) When treating the whole system, slow turnover rate means chemical might need to be applied at a lower concentration for a longer period Take individual tanks off-line for bath or flow-through treatment 72 Case Study #1 Recirculating salmonid facility Specific-pathogen-free eggs Biosecurity recommendations included disinfection of eggs with iodophor upon arrival from supplier Specific-pathogen-free water supply Design criteria included clean outs Attention to biosecurity appeared to be excellent but after one year, saw system-wide fungal infections and upon routine inspection fish were infected with Aeromonas salmonicida (furunculosis) 73 Case Study #1 (cont.) Recommendations Fungi growing on solids substrates, so system maintenance is overdue overdue – it’ it’s time to get into the cleanouts and get the solids out of the system, also, use formalin to treat affected fish. Some of the clean outs were not installed, others were concreted in. As a result, needed to try to access the pipes from hardhard-toto-reach areas – continually coping with chronic, lowlow-level fungal infections in the system – install cleanouts after system built Regarding the furunculosis bacteria – recommendations to disinfect eggs upon arrival were not followed because “the supplier disinfected them before shipping” shipping” – they are now disinfecting eggs upon arrival 74 Case Study #2 (or, if we do everything you say, will we experience disease outbreaks?) FI research system – a biosecure system Spring water supply No infectious disease problems except chronic, recurring respiratory disease A “new” pathogen – chlamydia-like/rickettsia-like bacteria that infects gill cells Identification of organism, development of prevention and control strategies are in progress 75 Current/Future Issues in Biosecurity of Recirculating Systems The safety of “disease-free” ground water supplies Opportunistic pathogens present in recirculating systems that come from the fish or from the environment 76 Biosecurity programs should be dynamic, re-evaluate and change as necessary 77