Several diseases have been encountered in cultured brown-spotted grouper and silvery black porgy in the mariculture facilities of the Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research. More than 50% of juvenile brown-spotted grouper cultured in concrete tanks died during an initial outbreak of the protozoan parasite Cryptocaryon irritans. Formalin treatment (35–50 mg/L, 5 h/d, twice a week) was used to control and prevent the disease. Formalin-treated fish experienced several reinfestations by this parasite, but no further deaths occurred. Brown-spotted grouper also suffered from severe eye lesions, including exophthalmia and opaqueness of the cornea. Only 35% of these fish cultured in fiberglass tanks did not have idiopathic lesions. Silvery black porgy cultured in floating cages in the open sea did not show any lesions from July to November 1985 apart from eroded fins, which increased in frequency with increasing stocking densities. However, a disease occurred during the winter of 1986, when the water t...