Title: Bacterial Diseases of Fish
1Bacterial Diseases of Fish
2Diseases/Groups/Species Covered (fish)
- Cytophaga-like bacteria (CLBs)
- Flexibacter psychrophilus (BCWD)
- Flexibacter columnaris (columnaris disease)
- bacterial gill disease
- Enterobacteria
- Edwardsiella tarda (Edwardsiella septicemia)
- Edwardsiella ictaluri (enteric septicemia of
catfish) - Yersinia ruckeri (enteric redmouth disease)
- Pseudomonas fluorescens (pseudomonas septicemia)
- Aeromonas salmonicida (furunculosis)
3Shrimp Bacterial Diseases Covered
- Vibriosis
- necrotizing hepatopancreatitis
- epicommensal fouling disease
4Bacterial Coldwater Disease (BCWD)
- Serious septicemic infection of hatchery
salmonids, especially coho salmon in Pacific NW - first described by Davis (1946) from a single
USFWS hatchery in West Virginia - also known to infect catfish in Louisiana
- agent was referred to as Cytophaga
psychrophila, now Flexibacter psychrophilus - long slender gram negative rod, glides and flexes
- 1.5-7.5 x 0.3-0.75 µM
5Bacterial Coldwater Disease
- Culture grows well on dilute media (cytophaga
agar or broth), yellow colonies, fried egg
appearance, optimum temp 15oC - Epizootiology affects young fish of all
salmonids, mainly in U.S., also in France - reservoirs are infected and carrier fish, normal
member of fish body surface - transmission horizontal (requires lesion),
vertical (adult--gteggs--gtoffspring) common on egg
surface
6Bacterial Coldwater Disease
- Environmental Factors occurs at low temps
(7-10), losses drop as temp rises, mortality
greatest in early fry stages (30-50), compounded
by crowding, organics, high flow rate - Pathology external lesions on fins, skin,
muscle, saddle lesion near dorsal, caudal
sometimes destroyed darkening spinal
deformities - Diagnosis presumptive via micro for gram
negatives in lesion, growth on cytophaga agar
confirmatory serological
7Bacterial Coldwater Disease
- Control prevention only via avoidance, no
vaccines available treatment via prophylactic
drugs (e.g., formalin) - Therapy external treatment, oxytetracycline
(10-15 mg/L), quarternary ammonium (2 mg/L) as
dips internal treatment with nifurpirinol (not
approved) as absorbed thru skin, oxytet in feed
at 50-75 mg/kg/fish/day for 10 days
8Bacterial Coldwater Disease
9Columnaris Disease
- Disease is so named because it produces mounds or
columns in wet mounts, characterized by extensive
erosion of the skin and gills - originally described by Davis (1922) from
Mississippi River - Agent Flexibacter columnaris or Cytophaga sp.
- morphology long, thin, gram negative,
aggregates in mounds on slides
10Columnaris Disease
- culture same as BCWD
- Epizootiology 36 different species, salmonids
and catfish most significant, highly virulent due
to temperature, creation of dams, crowded
elevators, largest fish kill recorded (14 M)
associated with it - reservoirs wild fish, typically suckers, normal
denizen of mucous, long-term life span - transmission horizontal, water, experimental
via moribund carcasses - pathogenesis acute, chronic or carrier
dependent on strain virulence, temp, stress
11Columnaris Disease
- environmental factors elevated temps, temp
depends on host species, usually gt15oC, severity
increases with temp, high pH, hard water, organic
matter, cleanliness important, crowding - Pathology lesions confined to head, back,
gills, starts as raised whitish spots distal on
fins, gills - gradually develops into large ulcers, bacteria
isolated from leading edge of ulcer - skin eventually erodes away, exposing muscle
- death rapid if necrosis/lesions are on gills due
to respiratory problems - highly virulent strains cause death w/out lesions
12Columnaris Disease
- Diagnosis presumptive via observance of long,
thin gram negative rods from lesions rhizoid
colonies on cytophaga agar haystacking, clinical
signs - confirmatory serological tests
- Control improved environment, cooler water
temp, increased oxygenation, decreased crowding,
organics, reduced stress - Therapy internal via oxytet in feed,
sulfonamides, nifurpirinol external as Roccal or
Hyamine (benzalkonium chloride), diquat, some
success with immunization
13Bacterial Columnaris Disease
Rhizoid colonies
14Bacterial Gill Disease (BGD)
- Affects hatchery-reared salmonids, cytophagal
bacteria in gill lamellae, high level production
of mucous - Agent etiology not well agreed upon, could be
caused by high levels of organics irritating
secondary lamellae, mucous then colonized by
bacteria - probably Flavobacterium branchiophila
- morphology variety of cytophagal-type bacteria
thus, morphology variable as gram negative rods
to filaments - culture cytophaga agar, as F. branchiophila, it
shows round, smooth transparent colonies, 5-30oC
15Bacterial Gill Disease (BGD)
- Epizootiology wide range of hosts, salmonids
mainly, occurs in warmwater fish, but not same
bacteria yearlings and older salmonids less
susceptible than fry mainly a U.S. problem - reservoirs not clear, probably infected fish,
mud, silt in water - transmission not clearly demonstrated, probably
from other fish - environmental factors poor water quality,
crowding, high organics, suspended solids, stress
as unfavorable temps
16Bacterial Gill Disease (BGD)
- Pathology loss of appetite, cant orient with
current, elevated respiratory rate - gill lamellae show proliferation of epithelial
mucous, advanced cases show clubbing and fusing
of lamellae, cotton-like tufts extending from
opercula - Presumptive Diagnosis large numbers of long
filamentous bacteria, swollen gills, fused
filaments, clinical signs - Confirmatory Diagnosis non available
17Bacterial Gill Disease (BGD)
- Prevention good environment water free of
adult fish, silt, mud no crowding (most
significant factor) strict hygiene - Treatment successful treatment depends upon
severity of problem (easy to kill by
overtreatment) quarternary ammonium compounds,
chloramine T, oxytetracycline salt _at_1-5 for 1-2
min extremely effective
18Bacterial Gill Disease
19Edwardsiella Septicemia (EPDC)
- Disease associated with Edwardsiella tarda, a
member of the enterobacteria - all are gram-negative, facultative aerobes,
moving via use of flagella, catalase positive,
cytochrome oxidase negative - pathogen of or can be carried by many vertebrates
and invertebrates (large reservoir) - can produce gastroenteritis in humans
20Edwardsiella Septicemia (EPDC)
- Agent gram negative rod, motile by flagella,
grows well on most standard media (TSA, BHI),
produces small transparent and smooth circular
colonies _at_ 35oC - ferments glucose and produces gas, indole
positive (dif. from E. ictaluri) - Epizootiology southern U.S., SE Asia, Pacific
NW, many warmwater species of fish (mainly
channel cats and bullheads), can infect other
homeotherms and poikilotherms
21Edwardsiella Septicemia
- reservoirs water (75), mud (64), many natural
hosts - transmission probably horizontal, host to host
- pathogenesis fish large than 38 cm (high
value), slow progress, low mortality unless fish
stressed (5--gt50 mort), causes development of
gas filled abscesses containing sulfide - environmental factors higher than 30oC water,
organics, crowding salmonids _at_ temps greater
than 200C
22Edwardsiella Septicemia
- Pathology mild infections exhibit small
cutaneous postlateral lesions, progressing as
abscesses in muscles of flank or caudal peduncle,
lose control of posterior portion of body - Diagnosis isolation from kidney into TSA or
BHI presumptive as gram negative, motile rod,
cytox neg confirmation serological - Control good culture environment, oxytet at 2.5
g/45kg feed/fish/day for 10 days, some vaccine
work, but only on eels in Japan
23Edwardsiella septicemia