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Farmed fish may transmit mad cow disease

Washington, June 17 (ANI): Farmed fish, if fed by-products rendered from cows, could transmit Creutzfeldt Jakob disease-commonly known as mad cow disease.

Questioning the safety of eating farmed fish, Dr. Robert P. Friedland, a neurologist at University of Louisville, has urged government regulators to ban feeding cow meat or bone meal to fish until the safety of this common practice can be confirmed.

"We have not proven that it's possible for fish to transmit the disease to humans. Still, we believe that out of reasonable caution for public health, the practice of feeding rendered cows to fish should be prohibited. Fish do very well in the seas without eating cows," said Friedland.

Creutzfeldt Jakob disease is an untreatable, universally fatal disease that can be contracted by eating parts of an animal infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE or mad cow disease).

The risk of transmission of BSE to humans who eat farmed fish would appear to be low because of perceived barriers between species.

But the researchers have said that it is possible for a disease to be spread by eating a carrier that is not infected itself.

It is also possible that eating diseased cow parts could cause fish to experience a pathological change that allows the infection to be passed between the two species.

"The fact that no cases of Creutzfeldt Jakob disease have been linked to eating farmed fish does not assure that feeding rendered cow parts to fish is safe. The incubation period of these diseases may last for decades, which makes the association between feeding practices and infection difficult. Enhanced safeguards need to be put in place to protect the public," said Friedland.

The study has been published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease. (ANI)

Fish with promiscuous females have evolved 'super sperm' to deal with competition

London, January 20 (ANI): A new study led by Canadian researchers has lent more force to the belief that the evolution of 'super sperm' depends upon competition.While it is known that sperm from promiscuous chimps move faster than those from relatively monogamous gorillas, Ontario-based researchers at McMaster University in Hamilton have for the first time shown the same pattern among fish too.Research leader Sigal Balshine and her colleagues studied a variety of species of cichlid fish living in.....
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