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Thread: Worrying news from the Zambezi

  1. #1
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    Default Worrying news from the Zambezi

    Hi all,

    Found this worrying news item while trawling through the international news wires.

    TW


    ZAMBIA-FISHERIES-DISEASE
    LUSAKA Sept 14 Sapa-AFP
    ZAMBIA WARNS AGAINST FISH KILLED BY MYSTERIOUS DISEASE
    Zambia's government on Friday warned citizens against eating fish killed by a mysterious disease after hundreds of them were found dead on the Zambezi River in the western part of the country.
    Agriculture Minister Ben Kapita told AFP that government has appointed a team of experts to investigate the outbreak of the disease that has killed several hundreds of sore-covered fish in the river in recent weeks.
    "We want to quickly find out the cause of the disease before the situation gets out of hand," Kapita said.
    The team would travel to western province to probe the cause of the disease and establish whether it can be transmitted to humans, he said.
    Several hundred dead fish with sores have been found in recent weeks floating on the river by fishermen, Kapita said, and warned Zambians to refrain from eating such fish until investigations were conducted.
    A mysterious disease, which infected fish in parts of the Zambezi River in nearby Namibia, also broke out last December, forcing the government to impose a two-month ban on fishing to safeguard the public.
    Scientists later found it to be epizootic ulcerative sydrome (EUS).
    EUS-infected fish developed large sores and died.
    The Zambezi River flows through eight southern African countries.
    Sapa-AFP
    /rm 09/14/07 15-35

  2. #2
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by tony weaver View Post
    Hi all,

    Found this worrying news item while trawling through the international news wires.

    TW


    ZAMBIA-FISHERIES-DISEASE
    LUSAKA Sept 14 Sapa-AFP
    ZAMBIA WARNS AGAINST FISH KILLED BY MYSTERIOUS DISEASE
    Zambia's government on Friday warned citizens against eating fish killed by a mysterious disease after hundreds of them were found dead on the Zambezi River in the western part of the country.
    Agriculture Minister Ben Kapita told AFP that government has appointed a team of experts to investigate the outbreak of the disease that has killed several hundreds of sore-covered fish in the river in recent weeks.
    "We want to quickly find out the cause of the disease before the situation gets out of hand," Kapita said.
    The team would travel to western province to probe the cause of the disease and establish whether it can be transmitted to humans, he said.
    Several hundred dead fish with sores have been found in recent weeks floating on the river by fishermen, Kapita said, and warned Zambians to refrain from eating such fish until investigations were conducted.
    A mysterious disease, which infected fish in parts of the Zambezi River in nearby Namibia, also broke out last December, forcing the government to impose a two-month ban on fishing to safeguard the public.
    Scientists later found it to be epizootic ulcerative sydrome (EUS).
    EUS-infected fish developed large sores and died.
    The Zambezi River flows through eight southern African countries.
    Sapa-AFP
    /rm 09/14/07 15-35
    Scary!!!!!
    "We all fish for our own enjoyment - me for mine and you for yours, nobody can say what is right and what is wrong." - Jim Leisenring

  3. #3
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    Default

    Zambezi fish disease mystery cracked
    Diseased fish caught in the Zambezi RiverMoses Magadza
    4 July 2007
    Source: SciDev.Net

    [WINDHOEK] Scientists have identified the mystery disease that killed fish in parts of the Zambezi River last year.

    Researchers have identified the disease as Epizootic Ulcerative Syndrome (EUS), caused by a fungal pathogen. Infected fish develop large sores and die from secondary infections.

    The researchers say this is the first known outbreak of the disease in Africa.

    But they still don't know how the pathogen got into the Zambezi, which flows through eight southern African countries.

    EUS also affects fish in Australia, the United States, and many countries in Asia. When EUS broke out in Asia in the 1970s, approximately 80 per cent of the fish population perished.

    In December last year fishermen in Namibia reported finding sores on fish caught in the Zambezi (see Deadly infection hits Zambezi fish). The government imposed a two-month ban on fishing to safeguard the public. A similar ban was imposed in Botswana, and was only lifted at the end of March this year.

    Shaft Nengu, a member of the research team and Botswana's assistant director of fisheries, said the spread of the disease downstream is inevitable. The research team has warned that the disease could become pandemic, damaging aquaculture, fisheries and aquatic biodiversity.

    "We do not have the capacity to establish the extent of the outbreak. We are trying to come up with a regional effort to respond to this outbreak and have written to all countries that share the Zambezi River to support this initiative," Nengu said.

    Nengu said the fungal pathogen does not pose any human health implications, but that fish exhibiting sores, which could harbour secondary infections, should still be treated with caution.

    Zimbabwean microbiologist Percy Chimwamurombe said that it is "presumptuous" to say that people will not be affected, and a coordinated regional response is essential to determining the extent and effects of the outbreak.

    "There is need for a concerted public awareness campaign given the possibility of secondary infections, which can be terrible," he said.

    Fish biologist Ben van der Waal, from the Integrated Management of the Zanbezi/Chobe River System Fishery Resource Project and also a member of the research team, said there was nothing anybody could do to eradicate the outbreak now that it was in a natural setting.

    He warned that fish losses during the first few years of the outbreak may be colossal, and that it would take many years to adapt to the disease.

    "In Asia it took about 20 years for the outbreak to go down to endemic levels," he said.

    The team of scientists included experts from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, Thailand's Inland Aquatic Animal Health Research Institute, and the Network of Aquaculture Centres in the Asia-Pacific.


    Related SciDev.Net articles:
    Bacteria in Zambezi likely cause of fish disease
    Deadly infection hits Zambezi fish


    If the experts are right, there is no way to stop the spread and could spell the end of tiger fishing in the Zambezi and kariba for at least 20 years!!
    "Judge of a man by his questions rather than by his answers" - Voltaire 1694 - 1778

  4. #4
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    Default

    Has anyone thought of relating this very alarming and worrying event to THIS http://www.flytalk.co.za/forum/showthread.php?t=1869

    I always wanted to be somebody,but now I realize I should have been more specific.
    Alcohol is the anaesthesia by which we endure the operation of life. GBS

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