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DAO 59:225-233 (2004)
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Abstract
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Effects of fish age and parasite dose on the development of whirling disease in rainbow trout
Eileen K. N. Ryce1,*, Alexander V. Zale1, Elizabeth MacConnell2
1Montana Cooperative Fishery Research Unit, US Geological Survey (USGS), Department of Ecology, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 59717, USA
2US Fish and Wildlife Service, Bozeman Fish Health Laboratory, 920 Technology Blvd S, Bozeman, Montana 59715, USA
*Email: eileenryce@yahoo.com

ABSTRACT: We determined the ages at which juvenile rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss became resistant to the effects of whirling disease following exposure to a range of parasite doses. Heretofore, the development and severity of whirling disease
in salmonids was known to be generally dependent on the age or size of fish when first exposed to the triactinomyxon spores of Myxobolus cerebralis; larger, older individuals tended to be less diseased. However, no systematic determination had been
made of the exact age at which fish become resistant to the development of the disease. We exposed rainbow trout at 9 ages (1 to 17 wk post-hatch) to 4 parasite dose levels (0, 100, 1000 and 10000 triactinomyxons per fish). Disease severity was measured
using mortality, clinical signs, microscopic pathology, and myxospore counts. Disease and mortality were substantially reduced when exposure to the parasite occurred for the first time at 9 wk post-hatch (756 degree-days at 12°C) or older. High doses
elicited more disease among the younger age groups, but the effect was dampened in groups exposed at about 9 to 11 wk post-hatch and absent thereafter. Rainbow trout reared in M. cerebralis-free waters for 9 wk post-hatch or longer, whether in the
wild or in a hatchery situation, should experience greater survival and less disease than fish first exposed to the parasite at younger ages.
KEY WORDS: Myxobolus cerebralis · Whirling disease · Resistance · Age · Dose · Rainbow trout
Full text in pdf format

Published in DAO Vol.
59, No. 3
(2004) on June 11
Print ISSN: 0177-5103; Online ISSN: 1616-1580.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 2004
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