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Evidence of enhanced bacterial invasion during <i>Diplostomum spathaceum</i> infection in European grayling, <i>Thymallus thymallus</i> (L.)
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Citations
40
References
2006
Year
Parasitic DiseasePathogen DetectionEnhanced Bacterial InvasionPathogen TransmissionAquacultureInfection ControlParasitologyEuropean GraylingHealth SciencesFarmed GraylingHeart TissueFish FarmingClinical MicrobiologyEye RuptureBiologyMicrobial DiseasePathogenesisMicrobiologyMedicine
Farmed grayling, Thymallus thymallus (L.), are susceptible to atypical Aeromonas salmonicida (aAS) infections. Interactions between bacteria and parasites were studied using grayling subjected to concomitant exposure to aAS bacteria and the digenean parasite Diplostomum spathaceum. Atypical AS was detected from fish by a combination of bacterial cultivation and polymerase chain reaction techniques. A detection level of 17 aAS cells per 100 mg intestine tissue sample was obtained. Concomitant bacterial exposure did not enhance the severity of grayling eye rupture and nuclear extrusion induced by D. spathaceum, but D. spathaceum invasion into grayling increased the proportion of fish carrying aAS in their heart tissue. However, the number of aAS cells detected in heart tissue was low. Atypical AS did not cause acute disease or mortality during 15 days post-exposure. There was a higher prevalence of aAS in grayling heart samples than in intestinal samples, indicating that the intestine is not favoured by aAS. We suggest that heart tissue would be a good organ from which to isolate aAS when tracing latent carrier fish. We conclude that penetrating diplostomids can enhance bacterial infections in fish and that diplostomids can cause serious eye ruptures in grayling.
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