Abstract
Formalin is currently the only aquaculture drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the control of fungi on the eggs of all finfish. The efficacy of formalin for disinfecting hybrid catfish (channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus × blue catfish I. furcatus) eggs was examined and compared with that of three other potential chemotherapeutants. Two experiments were conducted to evaluate treatment dose and frequency on the hatching success of the hybrid catfish. In the first experiment, hybrid catfish egg masses were divided and assigned to 1 of 13 treatments administered as daily 15-min baths. The treatments were as follows: (1) control (no treatment), (2) 50 ppm (mg/L) formalin (F), (3) 100 ppm F, (4) 200 ppm F, (5) 125 ppm hydrogen peroxide (HP), (6) 250 ppm HP, (7) 500 ppm HP, (8) 50 ppm povidone iodine (PI), (9) 100 ppm PI, (10) 200 ppm PI, (11) 2.5 ppm copper sulfate (CS), (12) 5 ppm CS, and (13) 10 ppm CS. Hatching success tended to be highest among eggs treated with 100 ppm F (87.7%), 2.5 ppm CS (87.0%), or 100 ppm PI (85.2%), although these success rates were not significantly (P > 0.05) different from that in the control treatment (82.8%). Treatment with 500 ppm HP resulted in a significant (P < 0.05) decrease in hatching success (31.5%). In the second experiment, the optimal frequency of formalin treatments was assessed by treating hybrid catfish eggs zero, two, three, or four times daily. Eggs treated three times daily with 100 ppm F had the highest (P < 0.05) percentage of hatched eggs. To maximize hatching success, three daily treatments of hybrid catfish eggs with 100 ppm F as a 15-min bath is recommended.