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Diseases encountered in rainbow trout cultured in recirculating systems

Recirculating systems create unique environments for fish culture which may provide favorable conditions for disease occurrence or the reproduction of opportunistic microorganisms. Stressful conditions in recirculating systems, such as poor water quality or high stocking densities in the culture tanks, may contribute to disease outbreaks. Non-infectious problems, including high levels of ammonia, nitrites, carbon dioxide, suspended solids, or ozone residual levels have also caused mortalities in recirculating systems. The diseases encountered in rainbow trout (O. mykiss) cultured in recirculating systems include: those caused by bacteria (bacterial gill disease, furunculosis, bacterial kidney disease, fin rot), parasites (Gyrodactylus, Chilodonella, Trichodina, Epistylis, Trichophrya, Ichthyopthirius, Ichtyobodo, proliferative kidney disease, amoebic gill infestation, Coleps), fungi (Saprolegnia), and viruses (infectious pancreatic necrosis, viral hemorrhagic septicemia, and infectious hematopoietic necrosis). Treatments with chemotherapeutants in the water or feed in a recirculating system present special considerations; the main one is whether the biofilter will be treated and how the chemicals could affect its function. Management practices designed to prevent the occurrence of diseases or the degradation of water quality are critical to a successful recirculating facility. The introduction of known pathogens with infected fish should be prevented either by hatching eggs at the facility from disease-free broodstock, or by purchasing fingerlings from disease-free certified broodstock and by creating a quarantine period. Each recirculating facility should design a protocol for prevention of and control of fish diseases with the aid of a fish health professional, based on the generally accepted principles of fish health management.

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Open Access
Diseases encountered in rainbow trout cultured in recirculating systems

Recirculating systems create unique environments for fish culture which may provide favorable conditions for disease occurrence or the reproduction of opportunistic microorganisms. Stressful conditions in recirculating systems, such as poor water quality or high stocking densities in the culture tanks, may contribute to disease outbreaks. Non-infectious problems, including high levels of ammonia, nitrites, carbon dioxide, suspended solids, or ozone residual levels have also caused mortalities in recirculating systems. The diseases encountered in rainbow trout (O. mykiss) cultured in recirculating systems include: those caused by bacteria (bacterial gill disease, furunculosis, bacterial kidney disease, fin rot), parasites (Gyrodactylus, Chilodonella, Trichodina, Epistylis, Trichophrya, Ichthyopthirius, Ichtyobodo, proliferative kidney disease, amoebic gill infestation, Coleps), fungi (Saprolegnia), and viruses (infectious pancreatic necrosis, viral hemorrhagic septicemia, and infectious hematopoietic necrosis). Treatments with chemotherapeutants in the water or feed in a recirculating system present special considerations; the main one is whether the biofilter will be treated and how the chemicals could affect its function. Management practices designed to prevent the occurrence of diseases or the degradation of water quality are critical to a successful recirculating facility. The introduction of known pathogens with infected fish should be prevented either by hatching eggs at the facility from disease-free broodstock, or by purchasing fingerlings from disease-free certified broodstock and by creating a quarantine period. Each recirculating facility should design a protocol for prevention of and control of fish diseases with the aid of a fish health professional, based on the generally accepted principles of fish health management.

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Open Access
Signal transduction mediated by antigen receptors on teleost lymphocytes

To generate an adaptive response from the mammalian immune system requires that antigen bind to cognate receptors on T and B cells, a process which activates intracellular signaling pathways. Crosslinking the B cell antigen receptor (BCR) ultimately activates cell proliferation in both higher and lower vertebrates. Recent studies suggest that many functional components of these intracellular pathways were evolutionarily conserved among the vertebrates. Antibody-mediated crosslinking of surface immunoglobulin leads to tyrosine phosphorylation on presumptive accessory molecules of the teleost BCR as well as several intracellular proteins. Crosslinking the teleost BCR also triggers calcium influx and activation of protein kinase C (PKC) which are hallmark components of the phosphatidyl inositol signal transduction pathway in mammalian lymphocytes. The activation of teleost PKC ultimately generates dually-phosphorylated forms of mitogen activated protein kinase. The latter enzyme is viewed as a key cytoplasmic control point for integrating signals arriving from several kinase/phosphatase pathways in mammalian cells. Preliminary evidence suggests that intracellular signaling mediated through antigen receptor complexes may be very sensitive to external factors, including heavy metals such as mercuric chloride which can alter calcium flux and tyrosine phosphorylation patterns in teleost leukocytes. As the process of lymphocyte activation in teleost fish is better understood, it may be possible to provide aquaculturists, environmental regulators and fisheries managers with better information on those natural and man-made conditions which interfere with the development of protective immune responses in natural and captive finfish populations.

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