Despite the doubts about probiotics - Due to unrealistic
claims, poor quality products or mode of delivery - appropriate probiotics do
actually work in aquaculture production. Olivier Decamp and David Moriarty
explain.
Aquaculture is developing and intensifying in most regions of the world in
response to the increasing demand for aquatic food products (FAO, 2006). This
intensity has led to an increased use and misuse of drugs and chemicals in
aquaculture, resulting in food safety concerns. Several

alternative strategies to the prophylactic use of
antibiotics in disease control have been proposed: instalment of biosecurity
management, effective vaccination, stimulation of the non-specific defence
mechanisms of the host (alone or in combination with vaccines), as well as
microorganisms (probiotics). Defining probiotics is a challenge - even more so
for aquaculture applications. Historically, probiotics were defined according to
their expected benefit or improvement to the host’s intestinal balance. Being
concerned with humans and terrestrial animals, probiotics were generally
Gram-positive obligate or facultative anaerobes, mostly lactic bacteria.
Fish are different Aquatic animals differ
from terrestrial animals in the level of interaction between the intestinal
microbiota and the surrounding environment. The bacteria present in the aquatic
environment influence the composition of the gut microflora and vice versa. This
environmental influence is much greater for shrimp and other invertebrates than
for fish. The bacterial community composition of the intestinal tract of aquatic
animals is different from that found in terrestrial animals. Gram-negative
facultative anaerobes generally prevail in the digestive tract of fish and
shellfish; Gram-positive obligate or facultative anaerobes dominate that of
humans and terrestrial animals (Gatesoupe, 1999). Aquatic animals are
poikilothermic and their associated microbiota may vary with temperature
changes; salinity changes in the rearing environment will also affect the
microbiota. An important consequence is that the most efficient probiotics used
for aquaculture will differ from those for terrestrial species.
Probiotics used in Aqua
culture
Moriarty (1998) and Verschueren et al (2000) defined aquatic probiotics as
live microorganisms that have a beneficial effect on the host by modifying the
microbial community associated with the host, by ensuring improved use of the
feed or enhancing its nutritional value, by enhancing the host response towards
disease, or by improving the quality of its ambient environment. This implies a
much wider range of microorganisms being used as probiotics for aquaculture
animals than for terrestrial animals. The development of suitable probiotics is
not a simple task. It requires empirical and fundamental research, full-scale
trials and the development of appropriate monitoring tools and production under
stringent quality control. Probiotics currently used in aquaculture include a
wide range of taxa, from lactic bacteria (
Lactobacccillus, Lactococcus,
Bifidobacterium, Pediococcus, Carnobacterium), to Bacillales (
Bacillus,
Paenibacillus, Brevibacillus), genera (
Flavobacterium, Cytophaga,
Pseudomonas, Alteromonas, Roseobacter, Aeromonas, Nitrosomonas, Nitrobacter,
Vibrio) and yeasts (
Debaryomyces, Saccharomyces). The list is not
exhaustive. The reasoning behind these microbial products
varies:
Availability of strains that had been originally selected for
terrestrial animals or humans.
Availability of very cheap microbial
products. In this case, the performance of the product is less of an issue than
the cost of such dream products.
Availability of strains that had been used
for waste water treatment. This is of interest for water quality control,
biofilter start-up, etc.
Research from universities and private companies
leading to the selection of specific strains for aquaculture applications.
Within this category, only strains that can be produced in large volumes and in
a cost-efficient manner with the right quality control and safety assessments
can reach the market.
Commercially available products include pure strains,
defined mixtures of specific strains, but also consortia of tens of strains (as
stated on label) and undefined mixtures. Products are supplied as liquids,
frozen product or
 |
| Successful harvest at Vinh Hau Aquaculture
Co.., Ltd., Bac Lieu, Vietnam, under the supervision of INVE first
liners. |
powder. Some of them require preparation
(such as on-site fermentation, “brewing” for 1, 2 or even 3 days prior to
application), whereas others are supplied at high concentration and do not
require any step prior to delivery. Products that are supplied as “ready to use”
powders have additional benefits, such as safety, expected consistency in
performance and longer shelf life. The strains are supplied in a defined ratio
(maintained until delivery) and the risk of contamination is eliminated with the
absence of manipulations, such as on-site fermentation.
Benefits differ The major benefits expected
from these probiotics will differ with the species (freshwater, brackish or
marine, fish or crustacean), the culture stage (larvae, juvenile, broodstock)
and the rearing system (flow-through or recirculation; tanks, ponds or cages).
The mode of delivery and the management of the facilities (appropriate
biosecurity measures, water renewal, chemicals, etc.) will affect the
performance, but also the survival or residence of the microorganisms in the
rearing environment and/or the host.
ClaimsDespite the doubts about probiotics -
due to unrealistic claims, poor quality products or mode of delivery -
appropriate probiotics do actually work in aquaculture production, as can be
seen from the literature. Benefits have been reported in the literature;
however, they are often restricted to academic studies. They provide very useful
information on the mode of action of strains and on the microbial ecology of
these man-made environments. Claims that have been documented include direct
inhibition of shrimp (Vaseeharan and Ramasamy, 2003; Jayaprakash
et
al., 2005) and fish pathogens (Nikoskelainen et al., 2001; Decamp
et
al., 2006;), faster growth (Ziaei-Nejad
et al., 2005), stimulation
of the immune system of shrimp (Rengpipat et al., 2000; Gullian
et al.,
2004) and fish (Nikoskelainen
et al., 2004; Brunt and Austin, 2005;
Taoka
et al., 2006), improved water quality and, more particularly,
ammonia in fish (Taoka et al., 2006), shrimp (Rengpipat, 1999) or live food
production (Rombaut
et al., 2003). The ability of probiotic strains to
affect the bacteria flora of live food, and hence the larvae microlfora as it
gets established, has also been documented (Gatesoupe, 1991; Harzevili
et
al., 1998; Rombaut
et al., 1999; Makridis et al., 2000). The
performance of these products under commercial conditions is seldom reported.
Reasons include strains from academic studies that cannot be produced in
sufficient quantity to demonstrate the value at commercial scales repeatedly, or
the difficulty in proving performance at the farm level. Only a few companies
have taken the necessary steps to develop products specifically for aquaculture
that can be exploited commercially at the same time. One of the companies that
conducted extensive work in this field is INVE Aquaculture with its Sanolife
line of products.
Trials shrimpThe
Sanolife Bacillus strains, when applied through the feed (top dressed
at the farm site or at the feed mill), have been evaluated in shrimp grow out
(
Litopenaeus vannamei, L. stylirostris and Penaeus monodon) in Asia,
the Pacific region and Latin America. The application of these bacteria
(concentration ranging from 1 x 107 to 1.5 x 108 cfu/g feed according to rearing
conditions), in association with suitable pond management, has led to marked
benefits to the farmers:
1. Faster growth - Scientists at IFREMER showed in a
controlled experiment with replicates that there was a very significant increase
in

growth rate when the Sanolife Bacillus strains were mixed
with the feed pellets shortly before feeding the shrimp (Moriarty et al., 2006).
Similar improvements in growth rates were recorded with L. vannamei under
commercial conditions in Ecuador and Brazil (
Figure 1).
2. Higher survival - The application of the
Sanolife Bacillus led to an increased survival rate in all studied
species. In a test carried out with
L. vannamei in Ecuador (7 ponds
with a total area of 96 ha), the survival rate increased by 62%. In Vietnam
(Vinh Hau Aquaculture Co., Ltd., Vinh Loi - Bac Lieu), the same combination of
probiotics Sanolife PRO-1 and PRO-2 in feed and PRO-W in water, together with
adequate water quality management and follow-up of the health status of the
animals, led to 100% higher harvested biomass and 10% higher survival rate
compared to the control ponds.
3. Improved Feed Conversion Ratio - For the three species
evaluated in the three regions, a marked decrease in FCR was recorded
(Figure 2).
4. Larger animals at harvest - In a trial carried out
with
P. monodon in India (Andrah Pradesh, triplicate treatment and
control ponds), the application of

Sanolife Bacillus led to larger average sized animals at
harvest (23g). In the treated ponds, 25% of the biomass was larger animals (34g)
fetching a much higher price, however, none of the controls reached this size. A
combination of higher survival with larger animals leads to higher biomass and,
more importantly, together with a more efficient use of compound feed, higher
income for the farmers. In all these trials, the net profit was far greater when
the probiotics were used.
Trials in fish Fish
trials were performed in recirculation systems (Tianjin Haifa Seafood Industrial
Development Co., Ltd., Tianjin, China). Flounder (60 - 80g) were stocked in
concrete tanks and received 2 separate mixtures of Bacillus. One was mixed
within the feed pellets and the second was applied

directly in the water (once every 2 weeks). The fish were
fed feed pellets (30% of diet) and trash fish (70% of diet). The survival and
FCR were good in all tanks. A noteworthy result was the marked improvement in
weight gain each month due to the combination of water and feed probiotics
(
Figure 3). This led to fish reaching market size much faster when
receiving the Sanolife. The performance of these Bacillus strains in shrimp and
fish larviculture has also been reported (Decamp et al., 2006, Decamp et al., in
press).
Safety of strainsA very
important issue is the safety of these strains to the target species, the
environment and humans. Strains should be tested for their sensitivity to
antibiotics. For some strains, tools are available that will allow the screening
of specific toxins, or genes associated with the toxin production, but this is
not the case with less common species. Hence, probiotic products should not
include Vibrio (risk of transfer of virulence genes) or coliforms. Within
 |
| In a trial carried out with P. monodon shrimp
the application of Bacillus led to a larger average sized animals at
harvest (23g). |
Bacillus and their related genera Paenibacillus and
Brevibacillus, the B. anthracis group is pathogenic for
animals. The species within this group (B. anthracis, B. cereus, B. mycoides
and B. thuringiensis) must not be present in any probiotics and,
furthermore, Bacillus probiotics in other generally safe groups, like
the B. subtilis group, must be checked to ensure they do not carry any
genes for toxins from the anthrax group. The strains should also be evaluated in
challenge tests and rearing trials in order to confirm their lack of toxicity to
the host or other animals found in the production facilities, at doses 10 or
100x higher than the recommended doses (Makridis et al., 2005). For
some strains, safety is based on historical use; they have been used in human
food for a long period of time and are thus considered as safe. However, their
safety to aquaculture organisms should still be investigated. Once the possible
probiotic effect has been demonstrated in vivo, the ability of the strain to
remain active in the aquaculture environment, to perform the expected function
and to maintain itself should be demonstrated. The ability of Bacillus species
to colonise (actually live and grow) in the intestinal tracts of shrimp, rather
than exist as transient flora during feeding, is now the subject of
investigation in a project at the Centre for Marine Studies, University of
Queensland. Preliminary results reported at the 2006 WAS conference indicate
that B. subtilis, or closely related species, do colonise in the midgut of
Penaeus monodon (Hill et al). There are major technical difficulties,
however, methods such as DGGE, RT-PCR or FISH should give us better insight into
the microbial dynamics associated with reared aquatic animals.
Conclusion
The potential for probiotic use in
aquaculture is immense because farmers must avoid prophylactic use of
antibiotics, however, bacterial and fungal pathogens will always be present. The
use of safe, natural bacteria (probiotics) to modify the microbial communities
in aquatic animals and their environment and thus control the pathogens is,
therefore, a sustainable alternative to the use of antimicrobial chemicals.
However, one should not consider them as miracle products solving health related
problems.
Source: Feed Mix Vol.15 no.1