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smellinfishy
12-15-2004, 05:27 PM
anyone catch a bass with red lesions, let me know, and read this.





Fish Handler's Disease' on Rise in Md.

GRETCHEN PARKER

Associated Press


CLAIBORNE, Md. - Doctors believe rockfish in the Chesapeake Bay are carrying Mycobacterium marinum, a bacterium that watermen call "fish handler's disease."

One stricken fisherman saw his hand swell to the size of a pork chop. The lump soon spread to his wrist, and his elbow began to stiffen.

With the start of rockfish season April 17 came little publicity about the disease, which first was documented by Maryland state scientists in 1998. They now estimate it has spread to 50 percent of rockfish in some areas of the bay. The Virginia Institute of Marine Science, however, estimates 76 percent of rockfish baywide are infected.

"I think there is a clear, human health concern that hundreds of people will be out fishing for rockfish at the start of the season, and very few are aware there is a prevalent disease with these fish," said Howard R. Ernst, a Naval Academy professor and author of "Chesapeake Bay Blues," a book published last year that is critical of the state's regulation of bay pollution.

This week, Desmond Kahn, an environmental scientist for Delaware's fisheries division, will present data to a conference of biologists showing the death rate of rockfish due to natural causes in the bay is three times what it was in 1997. Alternative data show a death rate that is slightly lower, he said.

One reason for the rise could be the spread of the mycobacterium, Kahn said, which is fatal to fish but not harmful to humans if eaten.

"That's not confirmed. But the data is convincing to me that survival (of rockfish) has declined," Kahn said.

Maryland scientists downplay the prevalence of the bacteria in the official state fish, which are touted as one of the Chesapeake Bay's few success stories. The state instituted a rockfish ban in 1985 after a collapse in the bay population. By the time the moratorium was lifted in 1990, the population had recovered.

Now, the start of rockfish season brings recreational fishermen to the boat ramps in swarms.

Last year brought the bay's highest rockfish catch since 1996, said Martin Gary, a DNR fisheries ecologist. There are an estimated 60 million of the popular fish from Nova Scotia to northern Florida.

Mycobacterium is a threat, Gary said, but it "isn't showing up in any way, shape or form that shows we're losing fish."

Gary says fish handler's disease suffers an exaggerated reputation because several infections that aren't mycobacteriosis get lumped together as fish handler's disease. The state doesn't keep records of how many people catch it, but surgeons at the Curtis National Hand Center in Baltimore say they see two to three new cases every month.

"There does seem to be a disproportionate number of people who live on the Chesapeake Bay who contract it," said James Higgins, a surgeon at the center, which is part of The Union Memorial Hospital. "This does seem to be a hotspot for it."

Gary points out that just one DNR rockfish researcher has ever contracted the disease. DNR's 10 striped bass researchers tag the fish seven months a year and handle more than 10,000 of them. They wear chain-mail gloves, which don't protect from spiny barbs on the fish.

The bacteria are also carried by crabs, oysters and can even be transmitted if a fisherman gets scratched or stabbed by a barnacle lying in infected water. By dipping their hands in a bucket of fresh water mixed with antibacterial dish soap, fishermen can ward off some infection, Gary said.

State officials have long been reluctant to publicize fish handler's disease, said James Price, president of the nonprofit Chesapeake Bay Ecological Foundation. Price said he fears that if the disease isn't addressed, the rockfish resurgence will be short-lived.

He first contacted DNR in 1996 to report that fishermen were noticing more skinny rockfish, some of which were covered with red sores and lesions.

DNR scientists have since found that the red rashes seen on rockfish are caused by a different infection still being studied.

"There's quite a bit of politics here," said Victor Crecco, supervisor of research in Connecticut's Marine Fisheries Division. "Politically, they feel very uncomfortable about this," he said of Maryland natural resources officials.

Crecco devised the formula that found the increase in Chesapeake Bay rockfish deaths.

But a minority of scientists and bay advocates are becoming more vocal about the disease, which becomes more prevalent in the summer and fall, when the food supply for rockfish becomes more scarce and heat degrades the bay's water quality. Those conditions stress rockfish, making them more susceptible to the disease.

ON THE NET

Virginia Institute of Marine Science mycobacterium page:

www.vims.edu/myco (http://www.vims.edu/myco)

smellinfishy
12-15-2004, 05:28 PM
I have caught quite a few this year with the lesions.

NIGHTSTRIKES
12-15-2004, 05:38 PM
smellinfishy,

Yes,
I sent these three fish off for research back
on the Spring,and the results came back that
it was not "Fish Handler's Disease"....
It was somekind of bacterial infection that
the fish came into contact with..
Remember The PeckBay Closure in O.C. ?

http://www.imagestation.com/picture/sraid118/pf401b6049ef561805d55bb07a0d26bb5/f87e4ee7.jpg
http://www.imagestation.com/picture/sraid122/p3e3e13b13e3e4af6a0019707b5e9902a/f83bd73a.jpg
http://www.imagestation.com/picture/sraid121/p5df01525e3da39fc5afced356d0908be/f849bff8.jpg

[ 12-15-2004, 02:40 PM: Message edited by: NIGHTSTRIKES ]

smellinfishy
12-15-2004, 05:45 PM
Wow those look alot worse than mine did, the lesioned ones I caught look like your third pic, still pretty disturbing. What is the story about the Peckbay closure?

snapper4
12-16-2004, 12:55 AM
Infected fish (http://www.thebassbarn.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=1;t=004306;p=2#0000 18)

I still think it was either 1) a cover-up and they didn't want this to get in the press or 2) there's many types of bacteria/organisms that can cause an infected fish--but one of the one's that commonly goes to humans is Myco. marinarum. There was some guy on here who had it on his leg for months or something. It's possible the one fish NS sent them just had Bacteria #5 out of say 10 or so different possible infections..

Anyways... I have caught several fish in the Spring with different types of lesions... some with holes in them, some with fungating looking lesions, some with flat scars... I just don't touch them and wash hands quickly afterwards..

bass on the brain
12-16-2004, 08:46 AM
At least 15 percent of tje fish i caught this year were infected all small marks.

Bucktail01
12-16-2004, 09:12 AM
i have been seeing this for years, mostly during the early spring, chucking, and also any time during the summer months which we catch and release all fish for this reason.when i first started catching more than 50% in the summer about 10 years ago and has gotten worse every year...... i also found that most all the fish coming from water 48 degree and below don't have these mark 20-30" fish that is.
i let the go if they have these mark......
bucktail

BIGGESTJACK
12-16-2004, 05:22 PM
when i read that story 2 plus 2 soes not equal 4.there is some weak info somewhere.

COMPLEAT
12-16-2004, 09:02 PM
Micobacterium MArinum is typically found in fish of warmer water. I wouldn't think that the lesioned fish that far north would be much of a threat. M. Marinum is some nasty stuff. Not treatable by ordinary antibiotics. Rather it is related to Tuberculosis and Leprocy and requires a six month bombardment of ethambutol and rifampin and usually surgery to rid the area of infected tissue. :eek:

Re-Bait
12-16-2004, 11:15 PM
We started seeing that up here in 2002, and in 2003 we had 10+. 2004 has been alot better, and since the spring I don't think I've seen a sick one. O.K. I know .....I haven't seen many bass anyway since the spring!

Anyway, my friend asked me "wouldn't it be better NOT to release a sick striper back into the bio-system?"

What do you guys think. Could a striper spread the infection?