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Contents
Oceanographic Instruments Monitor
Fishpond Algae

Catfish ponds showing algae growth.
(K4724-13) |
Carl Jeffers manages Top Cat Fishery in Portland, Arkansas, a fast-growing
company that sells 400,000 pounds of catfish weekly. The Catfish Farmers of
America named him Arkansas' Catfish Farmer of Year for 1995. But he wants to do
more.
"If we could find an economical way to control off-flavors and the
blue-green algae that produce them, it would be a tremendous boon to the
industry, no question," he says.
Many producers would agree. Currently, a major obstacle to catfish sales is
the off-flavor compounds produced by microscopic algae. These natural algae
by-products are absorbed into the fishes' meat, giving them a muddy taste. The
fish are still safe to eat, but they just don't taste good anymore.
It's estimated that during the late summer and fall, as much as 80 percent
of U.S. catfish loses some flavor quality.
As a result, many are unmarketable, causing an extra $5.8 to $12 million in
overhead costs. That's why three times a week, Jeffers takes fish from
harvest-ready ponds for flavor testing by processors.
Catfish ponds are an ideal habitat for algae, which are often beneficial to
the farmer. They provide oxygen for the fish and help stabilize pond
temperatures. But it's not possible to predict when the algae will produce the
off-flavor compounds.
Recently, Agricultural Research Service scientists David F. Millie and Chris
P. Dionigi joined forces with Oscar M. Schofield, a professor of oceanography
at Rutgers University, to develop ways to monitor algae in catfish ponds.
The studies focus on the relationship between the algae present, their
health, and the presence of off-flavors.
In a series of experiments at Stoneville, Mississippi, the research team
explored using oceanographic instruments to see if they might provide an
efficient means to monitor algae in catfish ponds. These instruments, which
measure the optical properties of water, might be used to estimate how much and
what kinds of algae are present in a pond.
Algae require light for growth. But some absorbed light is re-emitted as
fluorescence in a process that can provide basic biological information about
algae cells.
Researchers are looking at an instrument called the SAfire (Spectral
Absorption and Fluorescence Instrument), which can measure the color of light
that algae fluoresce. Scientists have long speculated this information could be
used to assess the kinds of algae in a pondparticularly the blue-green
algae associated with off-flavors. A second instrument, the pulse amplitude
modulated fluorometer, measures how much light is fluoresced by algae cells,
which allows researchers to estimate how healthy the algae are.
"What we hope to do is differentiate algae by their fluorescence
properties and determine whether there is a connection between algae health and
the production of off-flavor compounds," says Millie, a microbiologist at
ARS' Southern Regional Research Center in New Orleans, Louisiana.
"While initial results were promising, we need to finish analyzing all
the results," says Millie's colleague, plant physiologist Dionigi.
"The instruments were designed for clear, blue ocean water and might not
provide reliable information in murky catfish ponds."--By Jill Lee,
ARS.
USDA ARS
Food
and Feed Processing Research Unit, Southern Regional Research Center, P.O.
Box 19687, New Orleans, LA 70179; phone (504) 286-4457.
"Oceanographic Instruments Monitor Fishpond Algae" was
published in the November 1996
issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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