2013
DOI: 10.1080/15222055.2013.783521
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Controlling Mortality Caused by External Columnaris in Largemouth Bass and Bluegill with Chloramine‐T or Hydrogen Peroxide

Abstract: Columnaris (causative agent, Flavobacterium columnare) is a widespread fish disease of concern among fish culturists in the USA. If left untreated, an entire population of fish may become infected, and morbidity and mortality may reach high levels. In virtually all instances, columnaris outbreaks require intervention to prevent significant losses. A number of sanitizing agents, most notably chloramine‐T (CLT) and hydrogen peroxide (HP), have been used to control mortality associated with a variety of bacterial… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…; Bowker et al . ). Limitations such as regulatory issues, water quality/chemistry, safety/toxicity and the challenge models and target species by which these compounds were tested for effectiveness may impede their use in production settings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…; Bowker et al . ). Limitations such as regulatory issues, water quality/chemistry, safety/toxicity and the challenge models and target species by which these compounds were tested for effectiveness may impede their use in production settings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Although, it is used in aquaculture against bacterial and protozoal infections eliciting little or no response of oxidative stress biomarkers from Oncorhynchus mykiss when exposed to chloramine-T 10 ppm for 20 min (3 days; 3 expositions per day; [27]), it is not yet approved by the U.S Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use on fish [28]. Previously, chloramine-T 15 ppm was found to be effective within 10 min against some Aeromonas spp.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aquaculturists can little afford to incur additional costs of rearing fish, so administering fish drugs when they are not needed is considered a waste of money, particularly when the evidence of antibiotic-related growth promotion in fish is sparse and equivocal (He et al 2014). For example, at current prices it would cost US$35 to treat a relatively small cement raceway (18.3 m × 1.8 m with a water depth of 0.9 m) for 60 min/d for 3 d with 20 mg/L HALAMID Aqua (chloramine-T) and $73 to administer the same treatment with 50 mg/L 35% PEROX-AID (hydrogen peroxide; Bowker et al 2013). Another example is that there is a cost increase of $7.50-$30 per 50 lb bag of feed to top-coat the feed with one of the FDA-approved antibiotics (at current prices).…”
Section: Myth Iii: Drugs Are Commonly Overused In Aquaculturementioning
confidence: 99%