Michael L. Kent; Ralph A. Elston
Battelle/Marine Research Laboratory, Sequim, WA; The Marine Research
Laboratory is part of Battelle's Pacific Northwest Laboratories located in Richland, WA
Net-pen rearing of salmon is well established in Norway and Scotland, but
large-scale production by this method is relatively new in North America, Coho salmon
(Oncorhynchus kisutch) and Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) are the species most
commonly reared commercially in seawater net pens in Washington State. The Battelle Marine
Research Laboratory provides diagnostic services to fish farmers in the state. We have observed
new pathological conditions in pen-reared salmon in Washington in addition to diseases which
have previously occurred in European pen culture. Reported here is a summary of diseases
observed in pen reared salmon from 1985-1987.
Metazoan Parasites.
Although helminths were frequently observed in the guts of moribund fish
at necropsy, we have observed only external copepods (Lepiophtheirus salmonis) in
sufficient intensities to consider them significant pathogens. Lepiophtheirus salmonis,
commonly called sea louse, is a cosmopolitan parasite that has been reported to cause
epizootics in pen-reared salmon in Scotland (Wootten et al. 1977). Moderate infestations were
associated with dermal ulcerations on both coho and Atlantic salmon reared in Washington, but
severe epizootic episodes such as those seen with heavy infestations as reported in Europe have
not occurred.
Protozoans
Epizootic diseases due to protozoan parasites are common in aquaculture,
and several are significant pathogens in pen-reared salmon. We have detected
Parvicapsula sp. (Myxosporea: Myxozoa) in the kidneys of coho salmon. The parasite
sporulates in the epithelium, and lumen of the kidney tubules, causing tubular degeneration and
kidney hypertrophy (Hoffman 1984; Johnstone 1984).
We have also detected a microsporidan similar to Loma salmonis
(Microspora) in the gills of coho salmon. This parasite is a recognized pathogen of chinook
salmon, 0. tshawytscha (Hauck 1984), but this is the first time it has been reported to
cause disease in coho. In contrast to chinook salmon infections, the parasite caused severe
interstitial hyperplasia in the gills of coho after they were transferred to seawater.
Paramoeba sp. (Sarcodina) was also observed on the gills of coho
salmon after seawater transfer. Intense infections have occurred in the fall and winter months,
particularly in 1985, and affected fish showed severe epithelia] hyperplasia of the gill, which
resulted in fusion of the secondary lamellae. A similar amoeba has been associated with gill
disease in seawater-reared salmonids in Tasmania (Munday et al. 1987). External parasites such
as these gill amoebae are easily eradicated when fish are maintained in confined ponds or
raceways by applying chemotherapeutics to the water, but this is difficult when fish are reared
in net pens, which have a constant water exchange.
Bacteria
Renibacterium salmoninarum, the causative agent of bacterial
kidney disease of salmonids, was detected in both coho and Atlantic salmon. The bacterium
causes a chronic inflammation of the kidney interstitium, spleen, heart and other organs (Fryer
and Sanders 1981). It can be transmitted either horizontally or vertically within eggs (Evelyn
et al. 1984), and the disease is often exacerbated after infected fish are transferred to
seawater. Bacterial kidney disease has occurred in seawater net pens in Europe, and we have
detected it in both Atlantic and coho salmon in Washington net pens. Coho are apparently more
severely affected, and the disease is prevalent through the spring and summer in this
species.
Vibriosis, caused by Vibrio anquillarum and V. ordalii, is a
cosmopolitan disease which infects salmonids and other species cultured in seawater (Novotny
1978). The bacteria cause septicemia, and the disease is exacerbated at higher temperatures. We
have isolated V. anquillarum from coho during the summer, but it may have been a
secondary invader, because most of these fish were also infected with Renibacterium
salmoninarum. We have also isolated Vibrio spp. from Atlantic salmon that exhibited
visceral hemorrhages. These isolates were serologically distinct from V. anguillarum and
V. ordalii, and their role in the disease is unknown.
Furunculosis, caused by Aeromonas salmonicida, often causes severe
disease in freshwater fishes. As the culture of fish in seawater has increased, this bacterium
has been recognized as a pathogen in seawater as well (Novotny 1978), and we have observed
epizootic episodes due to this pathogen in net pens in Washington. As with
Renibacterium, epizootic disease in salmon with latent infections occurs after transfer
to seawater (Cox et al. 1986; Smith et al. 1982). Although the bacterium often originates in
freshwater, it can apparently survive and spread in seawater (Scott 1968), and infections have
been reported (Morrison et al. 1984) that are restricted to marine waters.
We have isolated a marine Cytophaga sp. from skin lesions in
Atlantic salmon. Cytophaga psychrophila and a related bacterium, Flexibacter
columnaris, are well-recognized surface pathogens of freshwater fishes (Anderson and Conroy
1969), but the taxonomy of members of these genera which are associated with disease in
seawater-reared fishes is poorly understood. Only C. maritimus, which causes disease in
cultured sea bream in Japan, is well-described (Wakabayashi et al. 1986). Shortly after
seawater introduction, the Cytophaga sp. which we have observed in Atlantic salmon
caused skin lesions that ultimately developed into large ulcers extending into the Muscle. The
ulcers were focalized in the posterior region of the fish and were particularly prevalent in
fish introduced in March 1985 and 1986. To avoid this infection, 1987 smolts were not
introduced at this facility until April. Although some fish became infected, the prevalence of
the disease was greatly diminished this year. Wet mounts and histological sections of the
lesions revealed massive numbers of Cytophaga-like bacteria. In 1986 and 1987, we
isolated a similar Cytophaga sp. from infected fish that is serologically and
biochemically distinct from the other known Cytophaga or Flexibacter pathogens of
fish.
Idiopathic Diseases
We have also observed a condition similar to pancreas disease in Atlantic
salmon reared in Washington (Kent and Elston 1987). Pancreas disease is a syndrome which
affects Atlantic salmon reared in Europe during their first year in seawater. Fish become
emaciated, and histological examination reveals diffuse necrosis and atrophy of the exocrine
pancreas. The cause is unknown. Researchers in Scotland have proposed various etiologies;
Ferguson et al. (1986) suggested that the condition may be related to vitamin E and selenium
deficiencies, whereas Munro et al. (1984) reported epizootiological evidence consistent with an
infectious etiology.
In the fall of 1986, we observed severe necrosis of the liver in moribund
Atlantic salmon maintained in net pens near a pulp mill in Washington. Examination of surviving
fish throughout the winter revealed basophilic foci of regenerating hepatocytes, intermixed
with cells undergoing hydropic degeneration, and parenchymal cells with nuclear inclusion and
enlarged nuclei. The latter is similar to megalocytic hepatosis of flatfish from polluted
waters in Puget Sound (Myers et al. 1986). Ultrastructural examination of the nuclear
inclusions revealed that they originated from cytoplasmic invaginations, and no viruses were
detected. Myers et al. proposed that megalocytic hepatosis is a percussor to liver neoplasia;
we are maintaining the surviving salmon in our laboratory to determine whether they develop
liver tumors.
Acknowledgments
This work was supported by Battelle Memorial Institute (BMI), Columbus
Ohio.
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