Abstract

Summary Rapid and reliable identification of tilapiine taxa and strains is essential for selective breeding purposes and the conservation of natural genetic resources. There is evidence that antisera-mediated erythrocyte agglutination assays can fit these requirements. We evaluated the applicability of agglutination tests by studying the capacity of species characteristic antisera to recognize erythrocytes from individuals of 10 natural Ghanaian populations of Oreochromis niloticus and Sarotherodon melanotheron. The vast majority of the 218 tested individuals could be identified based on antisera-mediated erythrocyte recognition. Controls indicated the specificity of these reactions. Still, erythrocytes from 16% of all tested specimens did not respond to any antiserum (zero responders), indicating the possible existence of blood group properties in tilapias. We discuss the specificity of the antisera, the relevance of zero responses and the applicability of these tests in aquaculture and field studies.

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