Abstract

Simple SummaryChinook salmon in California conservation hatcheries have suffered disease outbreaks and significant mortality due to the fish virus infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) since at least the 1940s. Although steelhead trout in California are also occasionally infected with the same virus they do not typically experience disease. In this study the susceptibility of California Chinook salmon and steelhead trout was defined in controlled experiments that exposed groups of juvenile fish to California IHNV strains (L genogroup). The results confirmed high mortality among Chinook salmon but very low mortality of steelhead trout, despite identical virus exposures. Tests of varying conditions found increasing mortality of Chinook salmon with increasing virus dose, but reduced mortality at higher temperatures or with increased age or size of fish. Among Chinook salmon that survived virus exposure the persistence of virus was detected in one fish 8 months after virus exposure. These findings demonstrate that L genogroup IHNV in California has host specificity for Chinook salmon, and provide an understanding of factors that contribute to disease epidemics in California hatchery Chinook salmon.Salmonid species demonstrate varied susceptibility to the viral pathogen infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV). In California conservation hatcheries, juvenile Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) have experienced disease outbreaks due to L genogroup IHNV since the 1940s, while indigenous steelhead (anadromous O. mykiss) appear relatively resistant. To characterize factors contributing to the losses of California salmonid fish due to IHNV, three populations of Chinook salmon and two populations of steelhead native to California watersheds were compared in controlled waterborne challenges with California L genogroup IHNV isolates at viral doses of 104–106 pfu mL−1. Chinook salmon fry were moderately to highly susceptible (CPM = 47–87%) when exposed to subgroup LI and LII IHNV. Susceptibility to mortality decreased with increasing age and also with a higher temperature. Mortality for steelhead fry exposed to two IHNV isolates was low (CPM = 1.3–33%). There was little intraspecies variation in susceptibility among populations of Chinook salmon and no differences in virulence between viruses strains. Viral persistence was demonstrated by the isolation of low levels of infectious IHNV from the skin of two juvenile Chinook salmon at 215 d post exposure. The persistence of the virus among Chinook salmon used for stocking into Lake Oroville may be an explanation for the severe epidemics of IHN at the Feather River hatchery in 1998–2002.

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