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Experiences and lessons from emergency aquatic animal disease investigations Transboundary aquatic animal diseases (TAADs) •highly contagious/transmissible (infectious!) •potential for very rapid spread irrespective of national borders (no passport!) •cause serious socio-economic consequences (high risk and high impact!) •OIE lists more than 30 aquatic pathogens/diseases which fit established criteria for listed diseases in terms of consequence, spread and diagnosis (important to trade!) •one of the negative impacts trade globalization (important pathway!) Health and aquatic animals • Aquatic animals require more attention in order to monitor their health – not readily visible except in tank holding conditions, live in complex and dynamic environment – feed consumption and mortalities are hidden under water • Wide range of diversity in terms of species, systems, practices and environment – different types of risks Health and aquatic animals • Range of diseases are also varied – some disease with low or unknown specificity – many with non-specific symptoms • Complexity of aquatic systems makes distinction between health, sub-optimal performance and disease obscure • Disease considered as the most important challenge in aquaculture Diseases in aquaculture Not caused by a single event End result of a series of linked events involving the interactions between the host (including physiological, reproductive and developmental stage conditions), the environment and the presence of a pathogen (Snieszko, 1974). Snieszko, 1974 Bondad-Reantaso et al., 2002 STRESS is an important factor!! Sources of stress • Poor water quality (low dissolved oxygen, improper pH, turbidity, etc.) • Pollution (toxic waste from factory) • Diet composition • Physical stressors – handling – transport – disease treatment • Water temperature Water temperature Ouch .. hot Grrr.. cold 32 C 24 C Fish are poikilothermic animals: body temperature is the same as that of the environment Factors contributing to the current disease problems in aquaculture • intensification of aquaculture through global distribution of shrimp diseases translocation of broodstock, postlarvae, fry and fingerlings • development and expansion of the koi herpesvirus (KHV) ornamental fish trade • misunderstanding and misuse of Taura syndrome, Infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV) of Specific pathogen free (SPF) Peneaus vannamei specific pathogen free (SPF) stocks in hatcheries Factors contributing to the current disease problems in aquaculture • slow awareness onKHVemerging diseases in Indonesia and EUS incursion in Africa • inadequate or poorly implemented biosecurity measures • unanticipated negative interactions exemplified by Kudoa amamiensis between cultured and wild fish populations • enhancement of marine and coastal areas pilchard mortalities with feeding with live through stocking ofpathway aquatic animals reared or fresh food as in hatcheries Indiscriminate translocation of infected brooders and postlarvae 10 3 examples of TAADs • Example 1: National spread of koi herpesvirus (KHV): case of Indonesia: ornamental to cultured to wild fish populations • Example 2: International spread of white spot disease (WSD), the most serious pathogen on shrimp • Example 3: Introduction of epizootic ulcerative syndrome (EUS) to the Chobe-Zambezi River (southern African region) Koi herpes virus (KHV) Koi carp (high value ornamental fish – one piece can cost as high as USD 100 000) Common carp – an important food fish 12 March 2002 13 April 2002 14 June 2002 15 August 2002 16 September 2002 17 November 2002 18 December 2002 19 January 2003 20 February 2003 21 Episodes of 10 Major Outbreaks 7. Toba Lake North Sumatra, Oct 04 7 4. Lubuk, 6. Karang Intan 8. Mahakam River, River, South Kalimantan, Sep 04 East Kalimantan, May 05 S Sumatra, 5 Jan 03 5. Maninjau Lake, West Sumatra, Aug 04 ??? 8 4 2 6 3 1st outbreak 1 3. Cirata st of cultured 1 outbreak 2. Subang Reservoir, and wild among 1. Blitar, District, Westcarp Java,in a cultured East Java, West Java, Aprilreservoir 02 common March 02 Apr 02 carp 9 10. Sentani Lake, West PNG, end of 05 10 10 1st outbreak among koi 9. Tondano Lake, North Sulawesi, carp in March 02 mid 05 22 Economic losses and investment Blitar Mar 02 outbreak: US$ 0.5 M NACA Emergency Task Force: US$ 20,000 Jul 02 outbreak: US$ 5 M FAO TCP: US$ 325,000 Dec 02/03 outbreak: US$ 10 M/US$ 15 M GOI internal budget: US$ 200,000 Nov 04 oubtreak: US$ 25 M Japanese Trust Fund: US$ 20,000 23 3 examples of TAADs • Example 1: National spread of KHV: case of Indonesia: ornamental to cultured to wild fish populations • Example 2: International spread of white spot disease, the most serious pathogen on shrimp • Example 3: Introduction of epizootic ulcerative syndrome to the Chobe-Zambezi River (southern African region) The Asian pandemic From Dr. P. Walker, CSIRO, Australia 1993 1993 1991/2 1993 1999 1993 1994 25 Global transfers of live shrimp Hawaii Tahiti Courtesy Prof. D. Lightner 26 Global distribution of WSSV India, Bangladesh, Iran, Sri Lanka Japan Taiwan South Korea USA Mexico Colombia Ecuador Guatemala Honduras China Nicaragua Thailand Panama Malaysia Peru Indonesia Brazil Myanmar Philippines 27 3 examples of TAADs • Example 1: National spread of koi herpesvirus (KHV): case of Indonesia: ornamental to cultured to wild fish populations • Example 2: International spread of white spot disease (WSD), the most serious pathogen on shrimp • Example 3: Introduction of epizootic ulcerative syndrome (EUS) to the Chobe-Zambezi River (southern African region) 1971 1989 1996 1989 1983 1991 1988 1984 1985 1981 1983 1987 Epizootic Ulcerative Syndrome (EUS) spread 1972-1996 1984 1979 1980 Australia, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Japan, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Nepal, Philippines, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam 1972 29 Fast forward 2006 More than 20 species confirmed EUS-positive countries Botswana, Zambia Namibia (2006, 2007 onwards), South Africa (2010) Lake and river systems in African continent with same fish fauna considered population at risk Activities and lessons learned KHV in Indonesia (2002) • NACA formed an international disease investigation Task Force: epidemiologist, AAH specialist, virologist • One week mission: organized the mission with local counterparts, visited farms, collected samples and sent to different laboratories • Confirmed the diagnosis KHV in Indonesia and Asia • Mission recommendations – Short-,medium- and long-term – Immediate notification to OIE – Subject request for technical assistance to FAO through a TCP – TCP was approved (2 years): build capacity on KHV diagnosis, improved virology laboratory; preparation of Asian guidelines • KHV continued to spread to other Asian countries WSD in Mozambique Channel (2013) • Assessment of performance and capacity on aquatic biosecurity • Sub-regional strategy containing 8 Programme Elements (emergency preparedness) • Sub-regional strategy presented to other partners and public sector – made additions – a robust road map for dealing with WSD in that region EUS in southern Africa (2013) • USD 25K for an international disease investigation task force (2007) • Regional TCP: EUS diagnosis, active/targetted surveillance, risk analysis (2007-2009) • South Africa taking a lead in terms of expertise and funding support • Regional strategy for all countries of South Africa (14 countries) Lessons Vigilance Advance financial planning is essential Post-mortem review and good documentation Competence of Competent Authority Mobilization of experts, alerting diagnostic laboratories Immediate notification, continuous surveillance Multi-disciplinary team including private sector (not only AAH professionals, aquaculture specialists, etc) • Full support to affected producers • National commitment • Regional and international cooperation • • • • • • • Are you ready for the next two days?