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Channel Catfish Herpesvirus

1989
Herpesvirus of channel catfish causes a serious problem in channel catfish fingerlings in the Southern United States and other areas where this species is cultured. The causative agent of channel catfish virus disease (CCVD) is also known as Herpesvirus ictaluri and commonly called channel catfish virus (CCV) (Wolf and Darlington, 1971; Fijan, 1968 ...
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Pharmacokinetics and metabolism of fenbendazole in channel catfish

Veterinary Research Communications, 1990
Fenbendazole (FBZ) was administered intravenously (1 mg/kg) and orally (5 mg/kg) to catheterized, confined channel catfish. Blood samples were collected for 72 h, and resulting FBZ plasma concentrations were pharmacokinetically modelled. Following intravenous administration t 1/2 alpha was 0.51 h, t 1/2 beta was 16.8 h, body clearance (C1B) was 0.0598 ...
J V, Kitzman   +9 more
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Feeding Channel Catfish

1998
Culture of channel catfish (Figure 9.1) accounts for about two-thirds of the commercial aquacultural production in the united states. Sales of catfish (Live Weight) reached 225,000 tons in 1996 (USDA, 1997). Once considered to have primarily a regional appeal as a food, farm-raised catfish are now in national and international markets. Market expansion
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Dietary Niacin Requirements for Channel Catfish

The Journal of Nutrition, 1978
Channel catfish fingerlings were fed purified diets containing five levels (0, 25, 50, 100, and 150 mg/kg) and six levels (0, 5, 10, 25, 50, and 100 mg/kg) of supplemental niacin in 20 and 12 weeks feeding studies, respectively. The dietary niacin level required to provide maximal growth in rapidly growing channel catfish fingerlings was found to be ...
J W, Andrews, T, Murai
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Dietary Phosphorus Requirement of Channel Catfish

The Journal of Nutrition, 1982
Two experiments were conducted to reevaluate the dietary phosphorus requirement of fingerling channel catfish. Basal diets containing either casein with supplemental inorganic phosphorus and 0.5% total calcium or egg albumin with supplemental inorganic phosphorus and 0.75% total calcium yielded similar requirement data.
R P, Wilson   +3 more
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CONTROL OF Epistylis ON CHANNEL CATFISH IN RACEWAYS

Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1975
An Epistylis outbreak occurred on channel catfish in raceways during two growing seasons. Bioassays of potential control chemicals were conducted. Based on the bioassay results, salt (NaC1) plus formalin and salt alone were the most effective treatment chemicals.
W A, Hubert, M C, Warner
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Structural diversity of channel catfish immunoglobulins

Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology, 1986
This paper describes a number of observations which show that the covalent structure of catfish Ig is heterogeneous and secondly that different Ig L chain classes are present.
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Responses of Blue Catfish and Channel Catfish to Environmental Nitrite

Journal of Aquatic Animal Health, 1995
Abstract In nitrite-exposure experiments, percent methemoglobin, plasma nitrite concentration, and plasma chloride ion concentration were compared between channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus and blue catfish I. furcatus exposed to sublethal levels of nitrite for 48 h at 25°C.
Jerolyn E. Schoore   +2 more
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TISSUE DISTRIBUTION OF CHANNEL CATFISH VIRUS

Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1971
The kidney, liver, intestine, brain, and muscle of live infected channel catfish were assayed for channel catfish virus in channel catfish gonad cell cultures. Sampling was done at 24-hour intervals for 120 hours. The virus was first detected in the kidneys of channel catfish 24 hours after inoculation.
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Taste bud development in the channel catfish

Journal of Comparative Neurology, 2004
AbstractTaste bud formation in channel catfish is first seen to occur in stage 39 embryos, when taste bud primordia (stage 1), consisting of three to five cells, including a single calretinin‐positive cell, can be recognized within the oropharyngeal cavity and maxillary barbels.
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