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1.
A whirling-disease-resistant strain of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss (GRHL strain) derived from a backcross of an F1 hybrid of two strains (German strain x Harrison Lake strain) with German strain females, was compared with the Ten Sleep (TS) strain of rainbow trout. The GRHL strain had consistently superior growth and feed conversion in two consecutive hatchery trials. Hatching and mortality rates were similar between strains. Both strains were stocked into two Utah reservoirs (Hyrum, Porcupine), and a third, Causey Reservoir, was monitored as a control for seasonal variation in prevalence of Myxobolus cerebralis. A total of 1,323 salmonids captured by gill net in spring and fall sampling between 2006 and 2008 were tested for M. cerebralis via pepsin-trypsin digest methods. Only eight of these (< 1% per species) had clinical signs consistent with whirling disease. In both reservoirs, GRHL survived better than the TS and had higher growth rates. The prevalence of M. cerebralis was significantly lower for GRHL (18.1%) than TS (50.0%) in Porcupine Reservoir. In Hyrum Reservoir the trend was similar, but prevalence was lower and did not significantly differ between GRHL (9.6%) and TS (23.1%). For infected fish, no significant differences were observed between strains in myxospore counts in either Hyrum (GRHL = 911-28,244 spores/fish [spf], TS = 1,822-155,800 spf) or Porcupine (GRHL = 333-426,667spf, TS = 333-230,511 spf) reservoirs. Unmarked rainbow trout in both reservoirs had significantly higher myxospore counts than stocked fish of either strain. There were significant differences in M. cerebralis prevalence and myxospore loads among other naturally reproducing salmonids in the reservoirs. The trend in susceptibility was cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarkii > kokanee Oncorhynchus nerka > brown trout Salmo trutta. The GRHL performed well in both hatchery and field settings and is recommended for stocking programs.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

The development of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss strains that are resistant to whirling disease has shown promise as a management tool for populations in areas where Myxobolus cerebralis is present. However, the physiological effects of the disease on characteristics necessary for fish survival in natural river conditions have not been tested in many of these strains. Five rainbow trout strains were evaluated for their swimming ability and growth characteristics in relation to M. cerebralis exposure: the resistant German rainbow trout (GR) strain (Hofer strain), the susceptible Colorado River rainbow trout (CRR) strain, and three intermediate (hybrid) strains (F1 = GR × CRR; F2 = F1 × F1; B2 = backcross of F1 × CRR). Three broad response patterns among strain and exposure were evident in our study. First, exposure metrics, growth performance, and swimming ability differed among strains. Second, exposure to the parasite did not necessarily produce differences in growth or swimming ability. Exposure to M. cerebralis did not affect batch weight for any strain, and critical swimming velocity did not differ between exposed and unexposed families. Third, although exposure did not necessarily affect growth or swimming ability, individuals that exhibited clinical deformities did show reduced growth and swimming performance; fish with clinical deformities were significantly smaller and had lower critical swimming velocities than exposed fish without clinical deformities. Research and management have focused on GR × CRR hybrid strains; however, given the performance of the GR strain in our study, it should not be discounted as a potential broodstock. Additional field trials comparing the GR and F1 strains should be conducted before wholesale adoption of the GR strain to reestablish rainbow trout populations in Colorado.

Received September 9, 2010; accepted May 27, 2011  相似文献   

3.
Abstract

Laboratory exposures to the infectious stages (triactinomyxons) of Myxobolus cerebralis demonstrated a range of susceptibility to whirling disease among four species of inland salmonids. Replicate groups of each species were exposed to two concentrations of triactinomyxons, a low dose (100–200 per fish) and a high dose (1,000–2,000 per fish). Exposed fish were evaluated for clinical signs, for severity of microscopic lesions at 35 d, 2 and 5 months, and for spore concentrations in the head cartilage at 5 months. A standard strain of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss matched for age served as a susceptible species control. Rainbow trout, westslope cutthroat trout O. clarki lewisi, Yellowstone cutthroat trout O. clarki bouvieri, and bull trout Salvelinus confluentus were susceptible to M. cerebralis infections. Clinical signs, including radical swimming (“whirling”) and black tails, were observed at 7 weeks postexposure among rainbow and cutthroat trout challenged at 3 weeks of age. Clinical signs were rare among bull trout exposed at an age of 4 weeks and absent among rainbow and cutthroat trout exposed at 3 months posthatch. Most rainbow, cutthroat, and bull trout were found to be infected when examined at 5 months postexposure. The most severe microscopic lesions among infected fish at 5 months postexposure were found among rainbow trout. Cutthroat trout had less severe lesions, bull trout had mild infections, and no evidence of infection was found among Arctic grayling Thymallus arcticus. Mean spore concentrations among infected fish correlated with the severity of microscopic lesion scores. Rainbow trout had mean concentrations of spores in head cartilage reaching 106, whereas more resistant species such as bull trout had 104 spores; no spores were found among Arctic grayling at 5 months postexposure.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

Susceptibility to infection by the myxosporean parasite Myxobolus cerebralis was compared among strains of cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarki in two separate exposure tests in the laboratory. In both tests, each strain was exposed to 1,000 triactinomyxons/fish for 2 h in 8.0 L of water. In the first test, three strains of 10-week-old cutthroat trout were compared: two strains of Bonneville cutthroat trout O. c. utah (Bear Lake and southern Bonneville strains) and Yellowstone cutthroat trout O. c. bouvieri. In the second test, these strains plus Snake River fine-spotted cutthroat trout O. c. subsp. and Colorado River cutthroat trout O. c. pleuriticus were exposed at either 5 or 10 weeks of age. The prevalence of the M. cerebralis infection was determined by single-round polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay 5 weeks after exposure. In the first test, the prevalence was significantly lower in the Bear Lake strain of Bonneville cutthroat trout (78.5%) than in the Yellowstone (97.8%) or southern Bonneville (100%) strains when exposed at 10 weeks of age. In the second test, the Bear Lake strain also had significantly lower infection rates after exposure at 5 (54%) or 10 weeks (82%) of age than the other four strains, which did not differ from each other (94–100%). The severity of the infection was also significantly reduced in Bear Lake Bonneville cutthroat trout, as suggested by the strength of the product of the single-round PCR assay. These results suggest that intraspecific differences in susceptibility to M. cerebralis infection exist, further supporting the need to maintain the genetic diversity among subspecies and geographic variants of cutthroat trout.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract

The intensity and prevalence of whirling disease was tested by exposure of 2-monthold fry and 1-, 2-, and 3.5-year-old adults of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss to a known number of laboratory-produced Myxobolus cerebralis at the actinosporean triactinomyxon stage. Fry exposed to graded concentrations of infectivity (triactinomyxons) for 3 h were individually examined for spores of Myxobolus cerebralis 5 and 6 months later. Exposure of fish to the lowest doses, 1 and 10 triactinomyxons per fish, did not result in detectable myxosporean spores. Fish that became lightly infected by a dose of 100 triactinomyxons per fish experienced a decrease in the incidence of infection between 5 and 6 months after exposure. A linear relationship was found between the numbers of recovered myxosporean spores and doses of 100–10,000 triactinomyxons per fish, and the spore burden appeared to plateau at doses of 10,000–100,000 triactinomyxons per fish. Adult fish continuously exposed to the highest dose of triactinomyxons for 3.5 months were infected and asymptomatic, however, the severity of myxosporean infection decreased with increased age of fish. This information may help in controlling whirling disease in salmonids.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract

Over an approximately 2-year period, 20,974 fish (trout and other salmonid species) from 230 separate waters (creeks, rivers, lakes, reservoirs, ponds, hatcheries, and irrigation ditches) within 21 of the 22 major drainages in Montana were examined for Myxobolus cerebralis. Nine of the major river drainages have waters containing infected fish: Beaverhead, Big Hole, Blackfoot, Clark Fork above the Bitterroot River, Flathead below the south fork of the Flathead River, Jefferson, Madison, Missouri above the Marias River, and Yellowstone above the Bighorn River. The Beaverhead, Clark Fork above the Bitterroot River, Jefferson, Madison, and Missouri above the Marias River have the greatest number of waters containing fish infected with M. cerebralis. Comparisons of infection levels (number of pooled samples that contain fish infected with M. cerebralis) between species among these drainages show significantly lower levels of infection in brown trout Salmo trutta and rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss in the Missouri above the Marias River drainage and significantly higher levels of infection of rainbow trout in the Jefferson. Comparisons of differences in infection levels between drainages among species show that, in the Beaverhead, Clark Fork above the Bitterroot River, and Madison, infection levels in brown trout are significantly higher than in rainbow trout. This is partially attributed to losses of juvenile rainbow trout because of M. cerebralis infection, leading to biased samples. Histopathologic studies showed lesions were consistently less severe in brown trout than other species and occurred in a different location (gill arches versus ventral calvarium). In six of the nine affected drainages (Beaverhead, Blackfoot, Clark Fork above the Bitterroot River, Flathead below the South Fork, Jefferson, and Madison), infected fish were found at or near the time that intensive sampling was initiated in the spring of 1995. In the three remaining affected drainages (Missouri above the Marias River, Yellowstone above the Bighorn River, and the Big Hole), infected fish were not identified until at least 15 months after the initiation of widespread testing. This indicates that in the first six drainages listed above, the infection was well established prior to 1995 but spread into the last three drainages in the ensuing months. Methods of transmission and the sources of infection are unknown, although the absence of infected fish in state, private, and federal hatcheries in Montana indicates hatchery fish from these sources are not likely to be responsible.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract

Two sizes of fingerling Snake River cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarkii behnkei and Colorado River rainbow trout O. mykiss were raised at hatcheries testing negative for Myxobolus cerebralis and stocked into the Dolores and Cache la Poudre rivers from 1999 to 2001. Populations were resampled over a 2-year period to determine which species and size combination had the highest growth and survival rates. Fish were tested for M. cerebralis via polymerase chain reaction and pepsin?trypsin digest analyses. Growth and survival rates between the species and size groups were not significantly different in either river. In the Dolores River, annual survival for both species and sizes of fish combined ranged from 0.063 to 0.12. In the Cache la Poudre River, survival for both sizes of rainbow trout was 0.004; survival for cutthroat trout ranged from 0.182 to 0.53. Larger fish had higher growth rates than smaller fish, and cutthroat trout had higher rates than similar sizes of rainbow trout. In both rivers, a higher percentage of the rainbow trout sample was infected than in the cutthroat trout sample. Rainbow trout also had a higher mean number of spores per head than cutthroat trout, and small rainbow trout had higher spore counts than large rainbow trout. Survival rates for cutthroat trout in the Cache la Poudre River were the highest of any of the groups, suggesting a difference that is biologically significant. Raising fingerlings to sizes greater than 100 mm can improve poststocking survival. If rainbow trout are stocked into contaminated waters, raising fingerlings to a larger size does not appear to improve growth or survival rates. Stocking rainbow trout in the spring could maximize growth rates but will expose fish to greater triactinomyxon densities, resulting in higher intensities of infection.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract

The first isolates of infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) recovered from rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss (formerly Salmo gairdneri) in France and Italy were compared to six representative strains from North America by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of virion polypeptides and neutralization by monoclonal antibodies (MAbs). All three IHNV isolates from Europe had similar polypeptide profiles when compared by SDS-PAGE. An analysis of the antigenic relatedness of the European isolates to representative strains from North America showed that they were clearly different from viruses obtained from salmonids in California. The RB/B5 MAb, which was developed against virus isolated from adult steelhead (anadromous rainbow trout) reared in central Oregon, neutralized all isolates examined. The 193–110/B4 MAb, developed against IHNV isolated from infected yearling rainbow trout in southern Idaho, neutralized all isolates tested except those from California. The SRCV/A4 MAb, developed against Sacramento River chinook virus (SRCV) isolated from adult spring chinook salmon O. tshawytscha in central California, was the least reactive, and strong neutralization was observed only with the SRCV strain of IHNV from California. However, partial reactivity of the virus isolates from France with the SRCV/A4 MAb distinguished them from the virus recovered from salmonids in Italy.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

We used a simple technique for filtering the actinospores of Myxobolus cerebralis from natural waters to observe seasonal periodicity at eight sites in the upper Colorado River drainage. We used a tub lined with 20-μm-mesh Pecap screen to concentrate actinospores from 1,900-L samples and estimate density by microscope count. Identity of the observed actinospores as those of M. cerebralis was confirmed in 86 samples by the use of a polymerase chain reaction test. The 42-ha Windy Gap Reservoir appeared to be a point source of actinospores; the highest densities observed were consistently from samples taken at sites just below the reservoir. Both densities and the frequency of detection were much lower 26 km below the reservoir. The actinospores first appeared in abundance after the runoff in both years of the study. Actinospore densities tended to be greatest during summer and early fall and lowest during spring. In August 1997, a series of significant flow fluctuations and attendant water temperature swings appeared to alternately inhibit and stimulate the release of actinospores. Populations of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss continue to suffer recruitment failures throughout the study reach, apparently because of the effects of whirling disease in age-0 fish. This suggests that the detection of low numbers of actinospores by this technique at some sampling locations may indicate a level of infectivity that is destructive for the susceptible rainbow trout.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

Three myxosporeans were encountered in the cranial tissues of a California population of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss examined for the presence of Myxobolus cerebralis, the causative agent of whirling disease. Typical spores of M. cerebralis and a previously undescribed species of Myxobolus were found in the cranial tissues prepared by the pepsin HCl-trypsin digestion method. Henneguya zschokkei was also detected in digest preparations of cranial tissues, but was more numerous when branchial cartilage was included in the preparations. Microscopic examinations of tissues of individual rainbow trout showed occasional infections with both myxobolid species. Myxobolus cerebralis trophozoites and spores were found in the cranial and gill cartilage, and Myxobolus sp. was found in the brain and spinal cord. Henneguya zschokkei was also found within granulomas in the connective tissues below the gill arch. Both M. cerebralis and H. zschokkei were associated with a chronic inflammatory response in their respective tissues. In contrast, the Myxobolus sp. spores were found in pockets within the nervous tissues with no detectable host response. The spore measurements, calculated from fresh digests of infected tissues for the three myxosporeans (N = 20), for length × width × thickness in micrometers (SD) were 11.7 (0.6) without tails and 42.6 (5.2) with tails × 7.7 (0.8) × 7.0 (0.1) for H. zschokkei, 9.9 (0.4) × 8.4 (0.1) × 6.5 (0.3) for M. cerebralis, and 12.7 (0.7) × 10.5 (1.0) × 9.5 (0.8) for Myxobolus sp. Examined under scanning electron microscopy, the latter two species were morphologically similar although distinctive in size.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract

Effects of temperature and aging on viability and infectivity of laboratory-produced actinosporean triactinomyxon spores (infective stage of the organism causing whirling disease) were studied. In vitro staining of triactinomyxon spores with vital fluorescein diacetate correlated with the ability of the spores to infect fry of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss. The experimentally produced actinosporean stage of Myxobolus cerebralis was short-lived, persisting for only 3–4 d at 12.5°C and for less time at warmer temperatures. The vital staining method has potential for screening therapeutants intended to control myxosporean infection of fish.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract

Spring creeks are important spawning and rearing areas for wild trout, but the stable flows, cool temperatures, and high nutrient levels that characterize these unique habitats may also make them highly susceptible to establishment and proliferation of the whirling disease pathogen Myxobolus cerebralis. We evaluated the spatial and temporal dynamics in whirling disease risk by using sentinel rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss fry in nine different spring creeks and their conjoining rivers or reservoirs in Montana over a 20-month period. Whirling disease risk was high in five of the seven pathogen-positive spring creek study sites; at these sites, prevalence levels exceeded 90% and over 50% of sentinel fry had moderate to high infection severity scores. Spring creeks generally had higher disease prevalence and severity than paired river or reservoir sites. Fine sediment levels varied widely among springs creeks with high and low whirling disease risk, and we found no significant association between fine sediment level and infection severity. The low risk measured for some spring creeks was likely attributable to the pathogen invasion being in its early stages rather than to environmental characteristics limiting the severity of infection. High whirling disease risk occurred over a wide range of temperatures at spring creek sites (4.5–13°C) and river sites (1.7–12.5°C). There was an unusual seasonal cycle of infection in spring creeks, with peak infection levels occurring from late fall to early spring and declining to near zero in late spring to early fall. The low infection risk during spring suggests that spring-spawning trout would be at a low risk of infection, even in spring creeks with otherwise high disease severity. In contrast, fry of fall-spawning trout may be much more susceptible to infection in spring creek environments.

Received November 22, 2011; accepted May 7, 2012  相似文献   

13.
Abstract

A nonradioactive in situ hybridization (ISH) protocol was developed to detect Myxobolus cerebralis, the causative organism of whirling disease, in its primary host, rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, and in its alternate oligochaete host, Tubifex tubifex. A cocktail of three oligonucleotide primers (derived from the small subunit ribosomal DNA sequence) directed at target sequences of the parasite DNA was tailed at the 3′ end with digoxigenin-labeled deoxyuridine triphosphate (DIG-dUTP). Labeled probes were hybridized to parasite DNA present in deparaffinized tissue sections from infected trout and oligochaetes. The bound probes were visualized after modifications of existing ISH protocols. By using the new ISH procedure, the parasite was found in target tissues of subclinically and clinically infected fish and tubificid oligochaetes after exposures of these hosts to triactinomyxons and mature spores, respectively. The probe did not bind with salmonid tissues infected with two other myxosporean parasites, Ceratomyxa shasta or the PKX organism, or to a Myxobolus sp. infecting the cartilage of plain sculpin Myoxocephalus jaok. These initial results indicate that ISH is an effective and specific test for detecting Myxobolus cerebralis in its fish and oligochaete hosts.  相似文献   

14.
Differences in susceptibility to the myxozoan parasite Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae, the causative agent of proliferative kidney disease (PKD), between four strains of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and brown trout (Salmo trutta) were evaluated. Fish were exposed to water enzootic for the parasite in the field for 5 days and were subsequently transferred to the laboratory. Relative parasite load was determined after 2, 3 and 4 weeks post-exposure (wpe) by quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) of kidney samples and number of parasite stages was determined in immunohistochemical stained sections of kidney, liver and spleen tissues. According to qPCR results, the highest amount of parasite DNA per equal amount of host tissue at all time points was measured in brown trout. Two of the rainbow trout strains showed lower relative parasite load than all other groups at the beginning of the experiment, but the parasite multiplied faster in these strains resulting in an equal level of relative parasite load for all rainbow trout strains at 4 wpe. A weak negative correlation of fish size and parasite load was detected. Only in samples of a few fish, single stages of T. bryosalmonae were found in sections stained by immunohistochemistry impeding quantitative evaluation of parasite numbers by this method. The results indicate a differential resistance to T. bryosalmonae between the rainbow trout strains investigated and between rainbow trout and brown trout.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract

Triploid (heat-shocked) and diploid groups of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis, coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch, and reciprocal hybrids were produced, monitored for early life stage survival, and evaluated for susceptibility to infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV). The female rainbow trout × male brook trout triploid hybrids had significantly greater (P < 0.01) survival than the diploid hybrids of this cross. The heat-shocked hybrid group of the female rainbow trout × male coho salmon also exhibited significantly greater survival to the eyed egg stage of development than the untreated group of this hybrid. Studies of the susceptibility of treatment groups to a 1990 IHNV isolate from the Hagerman Valley were conducted by using a standardized immersion exposure procedure at one or two different mean body weights. The diploid brook trout and coho salmon and two triploid hybrids (female rainbow trout × male brook trout or male coho salmon) were significantly less (P < 0.05) susceptible to IHNV than the pure-species diploid and triploid rainbow trout groups.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

Laboratory studies were conducted on the susceptibility of different strains of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar and rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss to infection with the monogenean Gyrodactylus salaris. This parasite, probably originating from the Baltic Sea region, is known to minimally affect Neva River (Baltic Sea) Atlantic salmon. However, following its introduction into Norway, G. salaris has caused severe mortality and morbidity among Norwegian Atlantic salmon, which are considered a highly susceptible strain. The cohabitation experiment included one stock of rainbow trout and four different strains of Atlantic salmon from the Baltic Sea region (Mörrum River, Sweden), Europe (Skjern River, Denmark; Conon River, Scotland), and North America (Bristol Cove River, Canada). Fish were exposed to a Norwegian strain of G. salaris, and parasite population development and distribution were monitored for 7 weeks. Rainbow trout exhibited low susceptibility to G. salaris infection, whereas Conon River and Skjern River Atlantic salmon were highly susceptible and exhibited high mortality rates. Mörrum River Atlantic salmon exhibited intermediate susceptibility and low mortality. Bristol Cove River Atlantic salmon harbored relatively low parasite numbers, but fish mortality was high. Our experiment showed that the Danish Skjern River strain of Atlantic salmon is highly susceptible to G. salaris infection, further supporting the hypothesis that Atlantic Ocean strains are more susceptible to G. salaris infection than are Baltic strains.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract

Efficacy of enrofloxacin (Baytril®, Bayer) was evaluated for control of Renibacterium salmoninarum infection in salmonids. Minimum inhibitory concentration studies indicated efficacy at 0.25–0.5 μg/mL. In laboratory challenge studies with rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, mortality offish receiving enrofloxacin daily at a dosage of 1.25–2.5 mg/kg for 10 d was significantly lower than that of nonmedicated fish. A general trend of increased percent survival with increasing dose was also observed.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract

In two separate tests rapid sand filtration was evaluated as a means of removing the waterborne triactinomyxon actinospores (TAMs) of Myxobolus cerebralis, the causative agent of salmonid whirling disease, from contaminated water. In the first test we independently evaluated two sizes of sandblast sands: #4010 (effective size, (ES) = 250 μm) and #4060 (ES = 300 μm). The product number relates to the sand's size composition, and each had a different effective size. Effective size is defined by that size fraction at which only 10% of smaller particles remain. Rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss were stocked into two separate systems with filters containing either one or the other size of sand, and TAMs were added to each system three times per week for all but the final 2 weeks of the 16-week test. A positive control (in which fish were exposed to the same number of TAMs without filtration) and a negative control (in which fish were not exposed to TAMs) were also included. Infection quantified by the pepsin?trypsin digest method showed no infection in fish from the two filter treatments. The average myxospore load among the positive controls was over 90,000 spores per fish head. In a final test, a nonreplicated comparison of filtration systems was conducted. The three systems used were as follows: (1) a drum filter in line with a UV filter, (2) a media filter followed by an ultraviolet (UV) unit, and (3) a sand filter containing three layers of sand. Water contaminated with TAMS was run through each filtration system, as well as through a positive control system, to raceways containing rainbow trout. Both of the dual-component commercial systems were 100% effective at preventing infection; the sand filter was 92% effective.  相似文献   

19.
The development of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss strains that are resistant to whirling disease has shown promise as a management tool for populations in areas where Myxobolus cerebralis is present. However, the physiological effects of the disease on characteristics necessary for fish survival in natural river conditions have not been tested in many of these strains. Five rainbow trout strains were evaluated for their swimming ability and growth characteristics in relation to M. cerebralis exposure: the resistant German rainbow trout (GR) strain (Hofer strain), the susceptible Colorado River rainbow trout (CRR) strain, and three intermediate (hybrid) strains (F1 = GR x CRR; F2 = F1 x F1; B2 = backcross of F1 x CRR). Three broad response patterns among strain and exposure were evident in our study. First, exposure metrics, growth performance, and swimming ability differed among strains. Second, exposure to the parasite did not necessarily produce differences in growth or swimming ability. Exposure to M. cerebralis did not affect batch weight for any strain, and critical swimming velocity did not differ between exposed and unexposed families. Third, although exposure did not necessarily affect growth or swimming ability, individuals that exhibited clinical deformities did show reduced growth and swimming performance; fish with clinical deformities were significantly smaller and had lower critical swimming velocities than exposed fish without clinical deformities. Research and management have focused on GR x CRR hybrid strains; however, given the performance of the GR strain in our study, it should not be discounted as a potential broodstock. Additional field trials comparing the GR and F1 strains should be conducted before wholesale adoption of the GR strain to reestablish rainbow trout populations in Colorado.  相似文献   

20.
The monogenean Gyrodactylus salaris Malmberg, 1957 is considered one of the most important parasites of wild salmonids in the European Community due to the heavy ecological and economical damage it has inflicted on Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) parr populations. Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) is susceptible to G. salaris and can act as a suitable carrier host and, consequently, its trade in EU territory is restricted in relation to the status of “recognized free” zones. Despite the economic importance of rainbow trout farming in Italy, information on the Italian gyrodactylid fauna is lacking and prior to this study, G. salaris had not been officially reported. During a routine health examination of farmed rainbow trout stock throughout Central and Northern Italy in 2004–2005, five fish farms were found to be infected with G. salaris alongside three other gyrodactylids. Morphological and molecular characterisation confirmed the presence of G. salaris, Gyrodactylus teuchis Lautraite, Blanc, Thiery, Daniel et Vigneulle, 1999 and Gyrodactylus derjavinoides Malmberg, Collins, Cunningham et Jalali, 2007, while Gyrodactylus truttae Gläser, 1974 was identified by morphological analysis only. The findings from this study extend the distribution of G. salaris within Europe and highlight the importance of the rainbow trout trade in its dissemination.  相似文献   

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