Edward J. Noga, MS, DVM
Department of Companion Animal and Special Species, School of
Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC
All disease processes are the integration of the host and pathogen
interacting with the environment. Because fishes are in many ways environmental conformers,
i.e., their metabolic rates and physiologic processes are closely tied to environmental
perturbations, it often becomes difficult to separate infectious from environmental
problems. This is because poor water quality, while being important in and of itself, it may
also potentiate infectious processes by suppressing the fish's innate resistance to an
infectious agent. For example, we have seen how the ability of fish to mount a humoral
immune response is highly temperature-dependent. In many instances, the optimal temperature
for reproduction of a pathogen is not within the optimal range of the host's immune response
to that pathogen.
The importance of environment and water quality management is also
reflected in the number of opportunistic facultative pathogens, such as Aeromonas
hydrophila and Flexibacter columnaris, and the fact that so many infectious
agents discussed today can be present as inapparent carrier infections just waiting for the
proper conditions to become a fulminating disease. Many of these pathogens survive and grow
best in "polluted" environments.
If you had to rank disease groups in order of prevalence or importance
in pet fishes, they would probably be ranked with environmental problems first, followed by
parasites, then bacteria, and finally, viruses and nutritional diseases. Host specificity of
virtually all of the important infectious diseases of pet fishes is very broad. While the
resistance to fish pathogens varies somewhat among phylogenetic groups, in general, diseases
are cosmopolitan in nature. This is understandable, since pathogens having a broad host
range and simple life cycle are most adapted to typical aquarium systems in which a large
number of unrelated species are mixed and in general, there are few intermediate hosts
available.
While pathogens affecting both freshwater and marine fishes are
cosmopolitan in nature, there are very few pathogens that are important in both marine and
freshwater fishes. But the types of diseases that affect both freshwater and marine fishes
are surprisingly similar. For example, white spot disease is a skin problem caused by an
ectoparasitic ciliate that in freshwater fishes is caused by Ichthyophthirius. A
disease having virtually the same pathophysiology and life cycle is Cryptocaryon,
which only affects marine fishes. There are numerous other examples.
In terms of drug treatments, we are at a very embryonic state of
development. Most drug treatments in pet fish are administered by the water-borne route.
This adds a very important complicating factor in the pharmacokinetics of drug use in fish.
Not only must one be concerned about the handling of drugs in fish, but one must also be
concerned with the interaction of the drugs in the water, because of both the effect of the
environment on drug effectiveness and the effect of the drug on the environment.
In summary, managing pet fish disease problems requires an integrated
approach that should emphasize disease prevention using adequate quarantine procedures,
minimizing environmental stress, and rapidly responding to disease problems before they
overwhelm the susceptible population.