S. Lair; R. Higgins; Y. Mailhot; D. Martineau
A population of Atlantic tomcod inhabits the brackish waters of the St.
Lawrence River near Quebec City, Province of Quebec, Canada. Adults move into rivers near
Trois-Rivieres City (primarily the Ste-Anne and Batiscan Rivers) during winter to spawn beneath
the ice. Fishing is an important tourist activity for the neighboring town, Ste-Anne de la
Perade, during spawning. In 1987-1988, the sport catch rate decreased dramatically from nine
fish per hour, the rate observed in previous years, to one fish per hour. The Provincial Fish
and Wildlife Department (MCLP) conducted a population evaluation by hoop net sampling the
following season. Histopathological lesions were present in 16.7% of 232 fish from sampling
conducted by MCLP officers during the winter of 1992-1993. The most frequent lesions included
fin ray granulomas (3.9%), oral ulcerations with or without accompanying mandibular
osteomyelitis (3.8%), cutaneous scars (3.6%), and ulcerations (2.8%). Bacteriological
examination was performed on 124 fish with gross evidence of ulceration. Pseudomonas flourescens
and Shewanella putrefaciens were the most frequent isolates (each bacteria was isolated from
18.5% of cultured fish).