Abstract

This paper describes the first systematic monitoring conducted in 2002 at shrimp farms in Sinaloa and Sonora (Mexico) for the presumptive and confirmative diagnosis of necrotizing hepatopancreatitis bacterium (NHPB) in Litopenaeus vannamei. Light microscopy (wet mounts and hematoxilin-eosin-stained sections of hepatopancreas) showed atrophy of the hepatopancreas, strangulation and necrosis of the hepatopancreatic tubules, with masses of NHPB within the tubular epithelium, hemocytic infiltrates and tubular melanization. The gene encoding the 16S rRNA (16S rDNA) of NHPB was amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from clinical specimens and the bacteria isolated using Percoll density gradient centrifugation. Negative-stain transmission electron microscopy revealed pleomorphic bacteria, most of them ovoid or rod-shaped (0.2 µm wide and 0.6–0.9 µm long), and a helical form demonstrating seven to twelve spiral turns (0.23 µm wide and 2.43–5.27 µm long). Several severe epizootics of commercially grown L. vannamei occurred during the study period and the mortality was attributed to NHPB infection. Using PCR and microbiological analyses, other etiologic agents, such as white spot syndrome virus, infectious hypodermal and hematopoietic necrosis virus, hepatopancreatic parvovirus and vibriosis, were ruled out as contributory factors.

Highlights

  • En México, el cultivo de camarón es una industria muy importante ya que genera empleos en zonas no productivas para la agricultura

  • Severe pathologies or epizootics associated with necrotizing hepatopancreatitis bacterium (NHPB) have been documented for the United States and Central and South America since 1985 until recent years (Johnson 1990, Lightner 1996, Loy and Frelier 1996, Loy et al 1996a, b, Briñez et al 2003), Figura 4

  • Negative staining with 2% PTA revealed up to eight flagella at the basal end of the helical forms of the bacterium isolated using Percoll density gradient centrifugation

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Summary

Introduction

En México, el cultivo de camarón es una industria muy importante ya que genera empleos en zonas no productivas para la agricultura. Actualmente existen 482 granjas con un área estimada en 41,750 ha y una producción de 78,000 TM por año. La mayoría de las granjas se concentran en los estados de Sonora y Sinaloa (Gutiérrez-Venegas 2005). Shrimp farming is an important aquacultural industry in Mexico, generating employment in areas not suitable for agriculture. Current data indicate that there are 482 farms in an estimated area of 41,750 ha and an annual production of 78,000 MT. Most farms are found in the northwestern states of Sonora and Sinaloa (Gutiérrez-Venegas 2005)

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