Abstract

From 1985 to 1987, outbreaks of a disease resulting in mass mortality occurred in larvae and juveniles of the Japanese flounder Paralichthys olivaceus cultured at prefectural and private hatcheries in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. The disease occurred in 10-30-d-old fish that were reared at about 18–20°C, and mortality usually reached 80–90% in a few weeks. The affected fish had opaque fins and a hyperplastic epidermis on the fins and skin. Electron microscopy revealed hexagonal virus particles in the nucleus (100–140 nm in diameter without an envelope) and cytoplasm (190–230 nm with an envelope) of the affected epidermal cells. Although isolation of the causative agent by the use of five fish-cell cultures was not successful, the disease was transmitted to healthy larval flounder by exposing them to a 0.45-μm filtrate of diseased fish homogenate. The agent's morphological features and its sensitivity to ether, to a pH of 3, and to a 30min exposure to 50°C indicate it is a herpesvirus.

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