logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Skip Navigation Links
logo 9/23/2024 7:26:17 PM     
New Fish Parasite Species Described; Farmed Fish Infected With Serious Disease 
NO Source: Underwatertimes 1/27/2021

While studying towards his doctorate of philosophy, Anders Jørgensen discovered a previously undescribed species of parasite that infects farmed fish and produces serious disease.

Single-celled parasites of the genus Spironucleus are known to produce serious illness in farmed and aquarium fish.

In farmed salmon, these parasites create foul-smelling, puss-filled abscesses in muscles and internal organs. After the first outbreaks of this disease were described in farmed salmon in the late 1980’s, it was assumed that the cause was Spironucleus barkhanus, which is a fairly common parasite in the intestine of wild grayling and Arctic char.
 

In these fish species, however, the parasite is benign. For his doctorate, Jørgensen completed genetic studies showing that the disease-causing parasite in farmed salmon is genetically quite different from the species one finds in wild salmonids, although they appear to be identical, even under high magnification in an electron microscope. Based on this observation, the parasite that causes disease in farmed salmon has now been described as a new species – Spironucleus salmonicida.

“Our work has shown that genetic methods need to be utilised for correct identification of single-celled parasites of the genus Spironucleus. Parasites that appear to be identical morphologically may in fact be significantly different genetically. An exact identification of organisms that produce disease is extremely important in the fight to find the cause of disease outbreaks and provides an important contribution to finding appropriate diagnostic methods”, says Anders Jørgensen.

 
Salmon, Atlantic Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4401It's time to think about hauling ice fishing shacks awayCBC News2021-03-04CA
4402National Chief Bellegarde urges Ottawa to rethink Mi'kmaq fisheries decisionCBC News2021-03-05CA
4403Want to know how fish see the world? Build them a TV…sciencefocus2021-02-18CA
4404Prestigious Journal Validates Asian Carp Researcunderwatertimes2011-01-05US
4405Japan new year tuna sale sets price recordBBC News2011-01-05JP
4406Catfish Study Reveals Importance Of Being 'Similar But Different'underwatertimes2011-01-05BR
4407Thousands of fish washed up dead in Chicago in latest bizarre mass animal deathsmirror2011-01-11UK
4408NOAA To Work With Six Nations To Address Illegal, Unreported, And Unregulated FishingUnderwatertimes2011-01-12CA
4409The freshwater fish fighttheguardian2011-01-17UK
4410Closed-pen salmon farm launches in B.C.CBC News2011-01-17CA
4411Meet the robotic ghost knifefish, the cyberfish who will tame the roiling seasgizmodo2011-01-19US
4412Chef creates meals featuring invasive Asian carpMilwaukee Journal Sentinel2011-01-23CA
4413Bass Angler Christiana Bradley Has Learning Experience In Floridaunderwatertimes2011-01-25US
4414Монстр из Ахтубыyandex2020-09-11RU
4415Young Islander builds ice fishing shack, hopes for winter catchesCBC News2021-02-21CA
4416Monduran monster's a world recordnews-mail2010-12-23AU
4417Wild Salmon Decline Was Not Caused By Sea Lice From Farm Salmonunderwatertimes2010-12-13US
4418Angler's 405.2-pound yellowfin tuna is largest ever caughtpetethomasoutdoors2010-12-06US
4419Angler lands world's biggest carp... the day after best friend caught another huge fish on same lakedailymail2010-12-06FR
4420Washington fish hatchery research shows circular tanks result in buff salmon and steelheadoregonlive2010-01-10US
4421Freshwater fish are in "catastrophic" decline with one-third facing extinction, report findscbsnews2021-02-23GR
4422Waves of fish mortalities attributed to cold weatherkristv2021-02-19US
4423Fish farms stir emotionscastanet2021-02-20CA
4424The feeding of the 5,000? Not quite, but pensioner lands record-breaking halibutdaily mail2010-11-23UK
4425Fish Are More Intelligent Than Previously ThoughtUnderwatertimes2010-11-16US

214 215 216 176 of [217 - pages.]