Abstract

The dynamics of establishment, pathogenesis, and continued maintenance of Enteric Redmouth (ERM) disease in rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) were examined. Groups were infected by parenteral and oral routes and subsampled at weekly intervals. Both modes of infection were standardized to obtain ID100 levels of infection with an average of 30 bacteria constituting an LD50 dosage when administered parenterally. The clinical course of the disease was monitored up to 102 days postinfection. A clinically asymptomatic carrier state infection was established in the lower intestine of 25% of survivors 45 days postinfection at 14.5 C. Thereafter, regular intestinal shedding of the pathogen, causing recurrent infection and mortality within the population, occurred on acyclic basis of 30–40-day intervals. Clinical recovery, establishment of the asymptomatic condition, and periodicity of intestinal shedding and the clinical course of the disease to convalescence were described.

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