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Comparative Study
. 1995 Feb;36(2):98-101.

Transmission of Loma salmonae (Microsporea) to chinook salmon in sea water

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Comparative Study

Transmission of Loma salmonae (Microsporea) to chinook salmon in sea water

M L Kent et al. Can Vet J. 1995 Feb.

Abstract

Transmission studies were conducted to determine if Loma salmonae was transmissible in sea water. Transmission of L. salmonae to chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) held in sea water was achieved by exposing fish to macerated, infected gill tissue. Fish were exposed in seawater in a flow-through aquarium, and the infection was detected as soon as 5 wk after exposure. Heavily infected fish exhibited numerous xenomas in the branchial arteries, central venous sinusoids, and within the blood channels of the lamellae. The pathological changes were similar to those seen in pen-reared salmon with L. salmonae infections. The infection was not observed in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), Pacific herring (Clupea pallasi, family Clupeidae), or shiner perch (Cymatogaster aggregata, family Embiotocidae), experimentally exposed using identical methods. This study suggests that L. salmonae is transmissible to chinook salmon in seawater netpens. Fish farmers and fish health specialists should consider this possibility when developing and implementing strategies to control the infection.

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References

    1. Can Vet J. 1989 Jul;30(7):571-5 - PubMed

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