Management of flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis (FINE) in cultured juvenile summer flounder

Knowledge that can be applied towards the diagnosis and prevention of Flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis in summer flounder ( Paralichthys dentatus), caused by the bacterial pathogen Vibrio harveyi, are presented in this research. Biochemical profiles are insufficient to differentiate V. harv...

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Main Author: Gauger, Eric Joseph
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: DigitalCommons@URI 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3160030
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spelling ftunivrhodeislan:oai:digitalcommons.uri.edu:dissertations-1823 2023-05-15T15:33:04+02:00 Management of flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis (FINE) in cultured juvenile summer flounder Gauger, Eric Joseph 2004-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3160030 ENG eng DigitalCommons@URI https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3160030 Dissertations and Master's Theses (Campus Access) Animal diseases|Aquaculture|Fish production text 2004 ftunivrhodeislan 2021-06-29T19:20:06Z Knowledge that can be applied towards the diagnosis and prevention of Flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis in summer flounder ( Paralichthys dentatus), caused by the bacterial pathogen Vibrio harveyi, are presented in this research. Biochemical profiles are insufficient to differentiate V. harveyi from other closely related species. Biochemical profiles can, however, be used in conjunction with 16S ribosomal DNA sequencing to provide a reliable method for identifying V. harveyi. A monitoring program for V. harveyi and other potential bacterial pathogens in cultured juvenile summer flounder found that V. harveyi was the most abundant and commonly found bacterial species in juvenile summer flounder at a commercial hatchery during the summer months. Presence of V. harveyi in summer flounder was not necessarily associated with large-scale mortalities, which only occurred after transport of juvenile fish. Temperatures of 25°C and transport stress resulted in highest mortalities in experimental infections of summer flounder with V. harveyi. The susceptibility to experimental infection by V. harveyi strain DN01, originally isolated from diseased summer flounder, was assessed for several economically or environmentally important fish species in the Northeast US including tautog, black sea bass, Atlantic salmon, rainbow trout, and mummichog. Vibrio harveyi strain DN01 was significantly more virulent to summer flounder than to the other species tested. A mutant strain of V. harveyi (SGM1) was created that was partially impaired in its ability to grow on a variety of media, including media with flounder intestinal mucus as a sole carbon source. The mutant also showed lower proteolytic activity in culture supernatants than the wild type. In experimental infections, the mutant was shown to be attenuated, however, it was not shown to be protective against subsequent exposure of summer flounder to wild type V. harveyi DN01. In summary, V. harveyi is a major bacterial pathogen of juvenile summer flounder, capable of causing mortalities in situations of stress. Management options include maintaining fish at temperatures at or near 18°C, reducing stress during transport, and timing production runs or transport in order to avoid the peak abundance of V. harveyi in incoming waters. Text Atlantic salmon University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI
institution Open Polar
collection University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI
op_collection_id ftunivrhodeislan
language English
topic Animal diseases|Aquaculture|Fish production
spellingShingle Animal diseases|Aquaculture|Fish production
Gauger, Eric Joseph
Management of flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis (FINE) in cultured juvenile summer flounder
topic_facet Animal diseases|Aquaculture|Fish production
description Knowledge that can be applied towards the diagnosis and prevention of Flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis in summer flounder ( Paralichthys dentatus), caused by the bacterial pathogen Vibrio harveyi, are presented in this research. Biochemical profiles are insufficient to differentiate V. harveyi from other closely related species. Biochemical profiles can, however, be used in conjunction with 16S ribosomal DNA sequencing to provide a reliable method for identifying V. harveyi. A monitoring program for V. harveyi and other potential bacterial pathogens in cultured juvenile summer flounder found that V. harveyi was the most abundant and commonly found bacterial species in juvenile summer flounder at a commercial hatchery during the summer months. Presence of V. harveyi in summer flounder was not necessarily associated with large-scale mortalities, which only occurred after transport of juvenile fish. Temperatures of 25°C and transport stress resulted in highest mortalities in experimental infections of summer flounder with V. harveyi. The susceptibility to experimental infection by V. harveyi strain DN01, originally isolated from diseased summer flounder, was assessed for several economically or environmentally important fish species in the Northeast US including tautog, black sea bass, Atlantic salmon, rainbow trout, and mummichog. Vibrio harveyi strain DN01 was significantly more virulent to summer flounder than to the other species tested. A mutant strain of V. harveyi (SGM1) was created that was partially impaired in its ability to grow on a variety of media, including media with flounder intestinal mucus as a sole carbon source. The mutant also showed lower proteolytic activity in culture supernatants than the wild type. In experimental infections, the mutant was shown to be attenuated, however, it was not shown to be protective against subsequent exposure of summer flounder to wild type V. harveyi DN01. In summary, V. harveyi is a major bacterial pathogen of juvenile summer flounder, capable of causing mortalities in situations of stress. Management options include maintaining fish at temperatures at or near 18°C, reducing stress during transport, and timing production runs or transport in order to avoid the peak abundance of V. harveyi in incoming waters.
format Text
author Gauger, Eric Joseph
author_facet Gauger, Eric Joseph
author_sort Gauger, Eric Joseph
title Management of flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis (FINE) in cultured juvenile summer flounder
title_short Management of flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis (FINE) in cultured juvenile summer flounder
title_full Management of flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis (FINE) in cultured juvenile summer flounder
title_fullStr Management of flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis (FINE) in cultured juvenile summer flounder
title_full_unstemmed Management of flounder Infectious Necrotizing Enteritis (FINE) in cultured juvenile summer flounder
title_sort management of flounder infectious necrotizing enteritis (fine) in cultured juvenile summer flounder
publisher DigitalCommons@URI
publishDate 2004
url https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3160030
genre Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
op_source Dissertations and Master's Theses (Campus Access)
op_relation https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3160030
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