Artículo de revista
Infectious haemolytic anaemia causes jaundice outbreaks in seawater-cultured coho salmon, Oncorhynchus kisutch (Walbaum), in Chile
Fecha
2006-07-13Registro en:
Journal of Fish Diseases 2006, 29, 709–715
Autor
Smith Schuster, Pedro
Larenas Herrera, Julio
Contreras Vásquez, Jorge
Cassigoli, J.
Venegas, C.
Rojas, M.E.
Guajardo Vidal, Álvaro
Pérez, S.
Díaz, S.
Institución
Resumen
In the last 9 years, epizootics of an icterus condition
has affected coho salmon, Oncorhynchus kisutch
(Walbaum), reared in seawater cages in southern
regions of Chile. At necropsy, fish from field cases
exhibited signs of jaundice accompanied by pale
light-brown livers and dark spleens. Histopathological
and haematological results indicated that
these fish presented haemolytic anaemia. After
microbiological examination no bacterial or viral
agents could be identified as aetiological agents of
this disease. In an infectivity trial, coho salmon,
Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L., and rainbow trout,
Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum), were inoculated
intraperitoneally with a filtrate of an organ homogenate
(0.45 lm) from a diseased coho salmon and
held for 60 days in tanks supplied with fresh water.
The disease was only reproduced in coho salmon in
which mortalities, beginning at day 23 postinoculation
(p.i.), reached a cumulative value of
24% at day 27 p.i. This condition was transmitted
to non-inoculated cohabiting coho salmon suggesting
that it is a waterborne disease. Thus, this
icteric condition is caused by an infectious form of
haemolytic anaemia, probably of viral aetiology,
and coho salmon are more susceptible than either
Atlantic salmon or rainbow trout.