The Progressive Fish-Culturist 60:88–94, 1998 American Fisheries Society 1998 Control of Furunculosis and Enteric Redmouth Disease in Sea-Run Atlantic Salmon Broodstock in the

1992 were treated with oxolinic acid and a bacterin. The bacterin was developed against furun-culosis and enteric redmouth disease. Among the 2,552 fish that were treated since 1986, 362 died and 65 (18%) of those fish had furunculosis. Among 206 untreated fish that were maintained as controls, 109...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Merrimack Rivers, Larisa A. Ford, Patricia A. Barbash, Rocco C. Cipriano
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.587.2962
http://www.fws.gov/northeast/fisherycenter/pdfs/fordetal1998.pdf
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Summary:1992 were treated with oxolinic acid and a bacterin. The bacterin was developed against furun-culosis and enteric redmouth disease. Among the 2,552 fish that were treated since 1986, 362 died and 65 (18%) of those fish had furunculosis. Among 206 untreated fish that were maintained as controls, 109 died and 63 (57.8%) had furunculosis. The reduction in mortality could not be attributed to either vaccine or antibiotic alone without further study. A 3-year study was designed to investigate if adult Atlantic salmon, undergoing the stress of migration, handling, and spawning, could mount a protective humoral immune response. Although the salmon were able to produce an agglutinin response, evidence was not found for production of a protective humoral response by these vaccinated Atlantic salmon. The infectious bacterial disease furunculosis (causative agent, Aeromonas salmonicida), causes losses among sea-run Atlantic salmon Salmo salar that are captured from the Merrimack and Con-necticut rivers and held for spawning. Enteric red-mouth disease (ERM), caused by Yersinia ruckeri