Or. Admin. Code § 635-007-0995 - Containment and Treatment of Fish Disease Agents
(1) The Department may approve the transfer
or release of fish or issue a Fish Transport Permit with special conditions,
depending on the disease history of the shipping station or watershed, the
current disease inspection report, or the susceptibility of fish to disease
agents endemic in the watershed to which the fish would be shipped.
(2) The Oregon exporter and importer
(recipient) are responsible for getting the required permits and complying with
all regulations concerning transporting fish within Oregon and importing fish
to Oregon from any other state, province, or country.
(3) The examination (station check) of
salmonids sampled at a particular hatchery for M. cerebralis must meet Oregon's
requirements for M. cerebralis import or transfer of fish from that facility to
or within Oregon.
(4) If the
Department determines that live fish have a disease agent that may affect fish
in Oregon, the fish may not be transported from one watershed to another within
this state or exported from this state without the Department's written
consent. The Department may restrict or prohibit a person from transporting
infected fish or fish suspected of being infected to or from certain watersheds
or areas within watersheds of the state.
(5) The Department may authorize a person to
transfer salmonids from any waters of the state or other states without a
health inspection to a facility approved by the Department for scientific study
pursuant to the objectives of projects acceptable to the Department.
(6) Fish at all Department facilities must be
treated so as to reduce the amplification of disease agents. Protocols listed
in sub-paragraphs (a)-(c) are required for all Department facilities and are
recommended for privately operated fish facilities to minimize the
amplification of disease agents within their facilities.
(a) When fish disease agents are detected,
preventative and therapeutic strategies must be implemented to reduce the
impact of such disease agents on both hatchery-reared and naturally-reared
native fish populations.
(b)
Sanitation protocols:
(A) Eggs must be
disinfected or water-hardened in buffered iodophor. Eggs must be disinfected
after collection and, if transferred to a new facility, they must also be
disinfected upon arrival. Imported eggs and their shipping containers must be
disinfected at the approved destination using methods acceptable to the
Department's fish health specialists. (A list of acceptable disinfecting agents
and methods is available from the Department).
(B) Disinfection footbaths or other means of
disinfection must be provided at the incubation facility's entrance and exit
areas for sanitizing footwear, raingear, and equipment while embryos are
incubating in the facility.
(C)
Equipment and rain gear used in broodstock handling or spawning must be
sanitized after leaving the adult area and before being used in other rearing
units or the hatch-house building.
(D) Equipment used to collect dead fish must
be sanitized before being used in another pond, or equipment must be designated
for each specific pond.
(E) Dead
fish must be disposed of promptly and in a manner that will prevent the
introduction of disease agents to waters of the State.
(F) Rearing units must be cleaned on a
regular basis by vacuuming, brushing, or flushing. All equipment used for this
purpose must be disinfected before being moved to a different pond.
(G) Equipment used to transfer eggs or fish
among facilities, including fish liberation tankers, must be sanitized before
being used with any other fish lot or at any other location. Disinfecting and
disinfected water must be disposed of in an approved manner.
(H) Rearing units must be sanitized after
removing fish and before introducing a new fish stock either by thoroughly
cleaning the unit and using a disinfectant or by cleaning it and leaving it to
dry for a minimum of three days.
(I) Use of pathogen-free water is preferable,
especially for egg incubation and early fish rearing.
(c) Preventative and therapeutic fish health
strategies must be implemented at all facilities in consultation with the
Department's personnel to avoid or reduce disease agents and fish losses. Fish
health strategies may include the following:
(A) Modifying hatchery practices such as
water temperature, feeding or cleaning regimes, egg culling operations,
isolating containers of infected fish, and using a different water
supply;
(B) Changing release
strategies, if approved by the Department's Fish Division;
(C) Destroying fish if the disease agent is
untreatable and an epizootic event is likely, or where an exotic or non-endemic
disease agent is detected, if approved by Fish Division;
(D) Increasing water releases from reservoirs
when possible to increase flows and reduce water temperature.
(E) Treating fish with federally approved
chemicals or drugs from one of the following categories:
(i) FDA-labeled and approved for use on food
fish;
(ii) Allowed by the FDA as an
Investigational New Animal Drug;
(iii) Obtained by extra-label prescriptions
from veterinarians;
(iv) Allowed by
the FDA as low regulatory priority or deferred regulatory status;
(v) Chemicals not allowed on food fish but
approved by the FDA through the US Fish and Wildlife Service for fish listed
under the federal Endangered Species Act.
(7) In order to continue improving
the Department's expertise in fish health, the Department must develop and
maintain partnerships with fish health specialists from other state and federal
agencies, universities, and management partners.
Notes
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 496, 497, 498, 506 & 508
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