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Caligus rogercresseyi infestation is associated with Piscirickettsia salmonis-attributed mortalities in farmed salmonids in Chile

Authors :
Andrea Müller
Omid Nekouei
Gabriel Arriagada
Claudia Foerster
Cristian Gallardo-Escárate
Christopher Hamilton-West
Marcela Lara
Source :
Preventive veterinary medicine. 171
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Caligidosis and Piscirickettsiosis are currently the most important sanitary challenges for the Chilean salmon industry. Caligidosis is caused by the ectoparasite, Caligus rogercresseyi and Piscirickettsiosis is caused by the intracellular bacterium, Piscirickettsia salmonis. Both diseases are highly prevalent and widely distributed in farming areas in Chile. The co-occurrence of the two diseases is frequently reported on salmon farms. However, there is little epidemiological evidence as to whether these two diseases are associated and generate interactive effects. This study was undertaken to evaluate the potential effects of C. rogercresseyi infestation on P. salmonis-attributed mortalities in farmed salmonids in Chile. Using a linear regression model, the potential association between the mean abundance of adult C. rogercresseyi in a period of 10 weeks and Piscirickettsiosis cumulative mortalities observed in the following 10 weeks was evaluated, while controlling for important confounders. These two 10-week windows were set around the time-point at which Piscirickettsiosis weekly mortality exceeded 0.1% for the first time in a production cycle. We found that the mean abundance of adult C. rogercresseyi was significantly associated with the Piscirickettsiosis cumulative mortality, suggesting the two diseases have a synergistic relationship. This relationship was of the same intensity in Atlantic salmon and rainbow trout. Our findings highlight the importance of taking effective control measures for C. rogercresseyi as a part of the strategies in place to reduce P. salmonis-attributed mortalities on salmon farms in Chile.

Details

ISSN :
18731716
Volume :
171
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Preventive veterinary medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....79c8f23cc3b161b0fb403b612c474926