A Natural Solution for California's Herds: African Catfish Peptides

California's cattle producers and agricultural communities are all too familiar with the rising challenge of antibiotic resistance, making common bacterial infections harder to treat in livestock. But imagine a future where we could tackle these infections with a natural, powerful alternative. Our research points to just that: antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) found in African catfish.

We're really excited about these peptides because African catfish thrive in pathogen-rich freshwater, naturally producing these robust immune compounds in their skin mucus as a defense. This natural origin makes them highly appealing alternatives to synthetic drugs.

Predicted Safety and Potent Action

One of the most compelling aspects of these AMPs is their predicted safety for mammals. Our initial computer analyses suggest that various catfish AMPs are generally recognized as safe (GRAS). We predict they'll be absorbed in the human intestine without causing liver, brain, or heart toxicity. Furthermore, lab tests on a promising peptide, NACAP-II, confirmed it was non-hemolytic, meaning it didn't damage rabbit red blood cells—a strong indicator of its potential safety for mammalian cells.

Beyond safety, these peptides demonstrate effectiveness against problematic bacteria. One study revealed NACAP-II's strong activity against Extended-Spectrum Beta-Lactamase (ESBL)-producing Escherichia coli—a critical concern for both animal and human health due to its resistance to many common antibiotics. Another peptide, ACAP-IV, also showed antibacterial activity against E. coli and Staphylococcus aureus. We believe these AMPs work by directly disrupting bacterial cell membranes, a mechanism that makes it harder for bacteria to develop resistance compared to how they resist traditional antibiotics.

Cooperative Extension Ventura County: Page

Avocado Leaf Analysis - 2000

So you took your leaf analysis in mid- August or are having it done now in October, and you are now planning your fertility program for the year ahead. The sampled leaves were the most recently expanded, and matured, healthy, terminal leaves from the spring flush and from non-fruiting branches.
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Cooperative Extension Ventura County: Page

How to Read those Reports - 1996

By this time of year avocado growers should have finished taking their annual leaf samples for a tissue analysis. The leaves would have been from fully-expanded, terminal spring flush, on branches without fruit. The sampling should have occurred mid-August to mid-October.
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Cooperative Extension Ventura County: Page

Other

Adjusting to a Smaller Fruit Load - 2000 Living with Fire - 1998 Avocado Record Keeping - 1996 Planting Trees - 1998 What Alternative Crops? - 1999 Windbreaks in New Zealand - 2001 What are our Groves Really Yielding?
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Cooperative Extension Ventura County: Page

Adjusting to a Smaller Fruit Load - 2000

This past spring with its cool temperatures has generally meant a poor fruit set for the avocado industry. Walking orchards in the Santa Barbara/Ventura area turns up trees with little or no fruit set.
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Cooperative Extension Ventura County: Page

Living with Fire - 1998

The very fact that avocados can be grown in hard to get to places means that the trees are also in areas that are subject to wildfire damage. Recently several hundred acres of avocado burned in the Fillmore/Santa Paula foothills. The fire was fanned by high winds and low humidity.
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Cooperative Extension Ventura County: Page

Avocado Record Keeping - 1996

Plop, plop. The sound of fruit dropping. Ever wonder how much fruit is lost from windfall or the tree thinning itself in order to carry the remaining fruit? We monitored 15 trees in a 5 acre block from January to harvest in September.
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Cooperative Extension Ventura County: Page

Planting Trees - 1998

Although the total acreage of subtropical fruit trees is declining in Southern California, growers are replanting declining groves and switching over from old varieties to new.
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Cooperative Extension Ventura County: Page

What Alternative Crops? - 1999

In the 1950's Ventura County was the world's largest producer of walnuts with nearly 50,000 acres. Prior to walnut production it was a major producer of lima beans and sugar beets.
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Cooperative Extension Ventura County: Page

Windbreaks in New Zealand - 2001

Most of the New Zealand avocados are grown in a coastal environment not unlike that of the Santa Barbara/Ventura area. Being coastal, growers have learned from past experience that wind protection is necessary to maintain fruit quality and tree performance for a range of tree crops.
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Cooperative Extension Ventura County: Page

What are our Groves Really Yielding? - 1996

The following information was compiled by Bob Brendler, our Farm Advisor, Emeritus. What he did was take the 1992 Ventura County Crop Report for 1992. Not the best year since we were still affected by the 1990 Freeze. He found the total acreage - 12926 - their total yield of avocados in tons - 1.
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