Aquaculture: 2000
Publications
Author: Moore,
J.D., Robbins, T.T., and Friedman, C.S.
Title: Withering syndrome in farmed red abalone
Haliotis rufescens: Thermal induction and association with
a gastrointestinal Rickettsiales-like prokaryote.
Publication: Journal of Aquatic Animal Health
12(1): 26-34, 2000.
© Taylor & Francis
Notes:
Withering syndrome (WS) is a chronic wasting disease responsible
for mass mortality in wild populations of black abalone
Haliotis cracherodii. The etiology of WS is uncertain with
limited evidence for the role of a gastrointestinal
Rickettsiales-like prokaryote (RLP). We documented for the first
rime the occurrence of animals with clinical signs of WS and
associated morphological changes in another haliotid species, the
red abalone H. rufeseens. In this study, 60 juvenile red
abalone (8 cm) were randomly selected from a farmed population
raised at 14 degrees C that was known to have low-intensity RLP
infections but lacked clinical signs of WS. The abalone were held
in triplicate containers receiving water of approximately 14.7
degrees C (Control, Co) or 18.5 degrees C (elevated temperature,
ET) and were fed equally for 220 d. Survival was 100% (30/30) for
the Co group and 67% (20/30) for the ET group. The ET group
animals had higher RLP infection intensities and showed more
clinical signs (mantle retraction, lower weight gain, lower
condition index) and morphological changes (digestive gland
degeneration) associated with WS. In trials conducted immediately
before termination of the experiment, ET group animals fed at half
the rate of Co group animals. Among ET group animals, the
intensity of RLP infections in the posterior portion of the
esophagus was positively correlated with WS clinical signs and
morphological changes, whereas no correlations were present among
Co group animals. During 1997-1998 and in conjunction with
elevated seawater temperatures associated with El Nino, several
abalone farms in California experienced a dramatic increase in the
proportion or red abalone showing signs of WS. Examination of 66
red abalone from five commercial farms revealed that animals with
more advanced RLP infections had more severe WS clinical signs and
associated morphological changes. Collectively, these data
demonstrate that RLP infection plays a key role in the etiology of
WS in red abalone and that warm water enhances the severity of the
pathogenic effects of RLP infection.
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