Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
J Fish Dis ; 40(5): 661-670, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27594383

ABSTRACT

Amoebic gill disease (AGD) caused by the amoeba Paramoeba perurans is an increasing problem in Atlantic salmon aquaculture. In the present PCR survey, the focus was to identify reservoir species or environmental samples where P. perurans could be present throughout the year, regardless of the infection status in farmed Atlantic salmon. A total of 1200 samples were collected at or in the proximity to farming sites with AGD, or with history of AGD, and analysed for the presence of P. perurans. No results supported biofouling organisms, salmon lice, biofilm or sediment to maintain P. perurans. However, during clinical AGD in Atlantic salmon, the amoeba were detected in several samples, including water, biofilm, plankton, several filter feeders and wild fish. It is likely that some of these samples were positive as a result of the continuous exposure through water. Positive wild fish may contribute to the spread of P. perurans. Cleaner fish tested positive for P. perurans when salmon tested negative, indicating that they may withhold the amoeba longer than salmon. The results demonstrate the high infection pressure produced from an AGD-afflicted Atlantic salmon population and thus the importance of early intervention to reduce infection pressure and horizontal spread of P. perurans within farms.


Subject(s)
Amebiasis/veterinary , Amoebozoa/isolation & purification , Fish Diseases/epidemiology , Salmo salar , Seawater/parasitology , Amebiasis/epidemiology , Amebiasis/parasitology , Animals , Aquaculture , Aquatic Organisms/parasitology , Fish Diseases/parasitology , Geologic Sediments/parasitology , Norway/epidemiology , Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary
2.
J Fish Dis ; 39(5): 531-7, 2016 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25952607

ABSTRACT

Viral diseases represent serious challenge in marine farming of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L). Pancreas disease (PD) caused by a salmonid alphavirus (SAV) is by far the most serious in northern Europe. To control PD, it is necessary to identify virus transmission routes. One aspect to consider is whether the virus is transported as free particles or associated with potential vectors. Farmed salmonids have high lipid content in their tissue which may be released into the environment from decomposing dead fish. At the seawater surface, the effects of wind and ocean currents are most prominent. The aim of this study was primarily to identify whether the lipid fraction leaking from dead infected salmon contains SAV. Adipose tissue from dead SAV-infected fish from three farming sites was submerged in beakers with sea water in the laboratory and stored at different temperature and time conditions. SAV was identified by real-time RT-PCR in the lipid fractions accumulating at the water surface in the beakers. SAV-RNA was also present in the sea water. Lipid fractions were transferred to cell culture, and viable SAV was identified. Due to its hydrophobic nature, fat with infective pathogenic virus at the surface may contribute to long-distance transmission of SAV.


Subject(s)
Adipose Tissue/virology , Alphavirus Infections/veterinary , Fish Diseases/transmission , Pancreatic Diseases/veterinary , Alphavirus/isolation & purification , Alphavirus Infections/complications , Alphavirus Infections/transmission , Animals , Fats/analysis , Fish Diseases/virology , Fisheries , Pancreatic Diseases/etiology , Pancreatic Diseases/virology , Salmo salar
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...