Amoeba species colonizing the gills of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in Swiss aquaculture

Author:

Vannetti Stefania M.12,Wynne James W.3ORCID,English Chloe4,Huynh Christine5,Knüsel Ralph2,de Sales‐Ribeiro Carolina1,Widmer Maro6,Delalay Gary1ORCID,Schmidt‐Posthaus Heike1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Infectious Diseases and Pathobiology, Vetsuisse Faculty, Institute for Fish and Wildlife Health University of Bern Bern Switzerland

2. Fishdoc GmbH Rain Switzerland

3. CSIRO Agriculture and Food Tasmania Hobart Australia

4. School of Biological Sciences The University of Queensland Queensland Brisbane Australia

5. Nautilus Collaboration Tasmania Lucaston Australia

6. Interfaculty Bioinformatics Unit and SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics University of Bern Bern Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractNodular gill disease (NGD) is an infectious condition characterized by proliferative gill lesions leading to respiratory problems, oxygen deficiency and mortality in fish. Globally, NGD primarily impacts freshwater salmonids in intensive aquaculture systems. In recent years, numerous outbreaks of severe gill disease have affected more than half of the larger rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) farms in Switzerland, mainly during spring and early summer. Mortality has reached up to 50% in cases where no treatment was administered. Freshwater amoeba are the presumed aetiologic agent of NGD. The gross gill score (GS) categorising severity of gill pathology is a valuable first‐line diagnostic tool aiding fish farmers in identifying and quantifying amoebic gill disease (AGD) in farmed marine salmonids. In this study, the GS was adapted to the NGD outbreak in farmed trout in Switzerland. In addition to scoring disease severity, gill swabs from NGD‐affected rainbow trout were sampled and amoeba were cultured from these swabs. Morphologic and molecular methods identified six amoeba strains: Cochliopodium sp., Naegleria sp., Vannella sp., Ripella sp., Saccamoeba sp. and Mycamoeba sp. However, the importance of the different amoeba species for the onset and progression of NGD still has to be evaluated. This paper presents the first description of NGD with associated amoeba infection in farmed rainbow trout in Switzerland.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Veterinary (miscellaneous),Aquatic Science

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