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Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus in the environment: relationship to effluent from aquaculture facilities
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1997
Year
Aquaculture FacilitiesAquacultureFish HatcheriesAquaculture SystemGastrointestinal VirusVirologyWaterborne DiseasesMicrobial Risk AssessmentMicrobiologyInfection ControlStream‐resident FishVirus TransmissionMedicineIpnv InfectionEpidemiologyAnimal Virus
Effluents from three fish hatcheries were monitored for the discharge and subsequent downstream distribution of infectious pancreatic necrosis virus (IPNV). Samples of springwater and surface water, and tissues from salmonid and non‐salmonid fish were assayed for IPNV. Water samples were processed to recover virus by adsorption to an electropositive, microporous filter matrix. No IPNV was detected in surface water collected above fish hatcheries or in hatchery springwater supplies. The virus could be detected for at least 19.3 km below the point of effluent discharge from hatcheries and the prevalence of IPNV infection in stream‐resident fish was 2.8%.