Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

J&K gets its first fish hospital, second in the country

- Ashiq Hussain letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

Every year our farmers lose 30% fish to diseases and if we can control that, we could enhance the overall production by onethird.

FEROZ SHAH, head, Aquatic Animal Health Management Division

RANGIL: Fisheries experts from Sher-i-Kashmir University of Agricultur­al Sciences (SKUAST) near Srinagar heard a common complaint from farmers during a survey of fish farms in Jammu and Kashmir.

The farmers would complain species like trout were dying of unknown reasons. The problem had the experts look for the reasons for unexplaine­d deaths. They were soon able to put a finger on it when they found pathogens like Trypanosom­a had made their way into Kashmir’s colder waters.

The blood parasite is mostly found among fish in tropical areas.

The dwindling number of fish, as a result, prompted SKUAST to open the Aquatic Animal Health Management Division (AAHMD) at Rangil in Central Kashmir’s Ganderbal district in May. It is second such fish hospital in the country setup on the lines of a similar facility establishe­d in Kolkata in 2015.

“From the last 4 years, we have conducted the survey in Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh and have screened many of farms. Many farmers have been complainin­g that their fish particular­ly trout are dying due to unknown reasons,” said AAHMD head Feroz Shah, a fish diseases researcher.

“Nature has provided us with abundant waters and fish. However, every year our farmers lose 30% fish to diseases and if we can control that, we could enhance the overall production by one-third,” Shah said.

Jammu and Kashmir has some 513 trout farmers, who produce over 20,000 tonnes of fish annually.

Shah said they have found the parasite in the blood of fish in Dal Lake as well. “These are big issues. There are apprehensi­ons that due to global warming some deadly pathogens will invade our waters. If the invasion happens, our fish cannot sustain those pathogens,” he said.

To deal with this and other problems, AAHMD has set up 20 glass tanks and aquariums that provide different treatments to sick fish. Some tanks are used for antibiotic, antiparasi­tic and antiviral medication­s. There are quarantine tanks, too, to acclimatiz­e the fish admitted to the hospital. An experiment­al fish farm is also associated with the hospital beside a cell culture facility, an aqua clinic and a pathology laboratory.

There are some 122 species of fish found in streams, lakes and rivers of the state. Pollution and introducti­on of exotic species have been blamed for the vanishing of some of the valley’s indigenous fish including Snowtrout or Schizothor­ax.

Nasir Ahmad, a 45-yearold fish farmer from North Kashmir’s Bandipora, said the hospital was helping them reduce losses. He said he gets to know his fish are sick when they change colour or show less mobility.

Ahmad rushed to the hospital in August after his trout fish contracted a bacterial infection.

“...I had bought some 6,000 trout Frys but started losing them. I reached the hospital and they diagnosed them with a bacterial infection. They prescribed me medicine and I managed to save some 500 of my Frys. The truth is I reached hospital late,” Ahmad said.

Shah said that they have started trials to prepare medicines at the hospital.

“We are trying to prepare a protocol for producing drugs using aquatic weeds or medicinal plants. What we are attempting to produce is medicated feeds, which will be cheaper and easy to procure. If we succeed all the farmers will be benefited,” he said.

 ??  ?? ■ Jammu and Kashmir has some 513 trout farmers, who produce over 20,000 tonnes of fish annually. WASEEM ANDRABI/ HT PHOTOS
■ Jammu and Kashmir has some 513 trout farmers, who produce over 20,000 tonnes of fish annually. WASEEM ANDRABI/ HT PHOTOS

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