On Wednesday, October 26, 2016, Dalton Terrell <daltonbterrell@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wednesday, October 26, 2016 at 8:49:36 AM UTC-4, Forrest Allen wrote:Just FYI - the response from VDGIF:Forrest,
I have never personally seen that amount of black spot on an individual brook trout. It is much more common for us to see black spot on other fish species like creek chubs, blacknose dace, common shiners, and other minnows. The "black spot" (grub) needs a snail and a fish eating bird to complete its life cycle. Where we see a high volume of black spot there is often high densities of snails. Snails feed on attached algae which is driven by higher inputs of nutrients. Thank you for sending the picture. The brook trout in the picture should live a normal life. Black spot is a natural parasite found in streams throughout Augusta County. While I am not overly concerned, I would be interested in knowing the tributary where the trout was caught. Excess nutrients enriching the stream (increasing the snail population) could lead to degraded water quality.
Stephen J. Reeser
District Fisheries Biologist
Virginia Dept. Game and Inland Fisheries
Region IV
On Tuesday, October 18, 2016 at 3:40:30 PM UTC-4, Carl wrote:Of course you should. And then let us know if they already know about it.Carl--Carl ZmolaOn Tue, Oct 18, 2016 at 8:38 AM, Forrest Allen <gforres...@gmail.com> wrote:Morning everyone,--I caught a brookie with the Black Spot parasites (http://www.maine.gov/ifw/fishing/health/vol2issue8.htm ) on it this past weekend in George Washingon and Jefferson NF. I was wondering if yall have seen this on other Virginia streams, rivers or fish? My google searches seem to show it mainly existing in Northern states. I understand that it can kill the fish, but is it something that ought to be reported to VDGIF?Any thoughts?Forrest
http://www.tpfr.org
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