Preliminary characterization of a virus causing infectious anemia among stocks of salmonid fish in the western United States

By: , and 
Edited by: Winfried Ahne and E. Kurstak

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Abstract

Since 1982, anemias occurring in stocks of yearling coho (Oncorhynchus kisutch) and chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) have been associated with serious losses at hatcheries in the Pacific Northwest, USA. The anemia is often accompanied by infections with external fungus (e.g. Saprolegnia) or the bacterial pathogens Cytophaga psychrophila or Renibacterium salmoninarum (Holt and Rohovec 1984, Leek 1987). The losses associated with the anemia are thought to be caused by these secondary infections.

Blood smears that were made from anemic fish and stained with Giemsa or pinacyanol chloride showed erythrocytic inclusions ranging in size from 1 to 8 um and varying in number per cell. Thin sections of infected red blood cells (RBC) examined by electron microscopy revealed virus particles approximately 70 nm in diameter. The virions were scattered in the cytoplasm of the RBC or contained within membrane bound organelles. These virus particles were morphologically distinct from the iridovirus, erythrocytic necrosis virus (ENV), which is also associated with anemia (Holt and Rohovec 1984, Leek 1987). Evidence suggests that the etiological agent of this new anemic disease, termed erythrocytic inclusion body syndrome (EIBS) by Leek (1987), is a previously undescribed virus infecting salmon. The purpose of this study was to experimentally transmit the disease to healthy fish, to determine the blood parameters associated with infection, and to investigate the nature of the virus associated with EIBS.

Publication type Book chapter
Publication Subtype Book Chapter
Title Preliminary characterization of a virus causing infectious anemia among stocks of salmonid fish in the western United States
DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-83727-2
Year Published 1989
Language English
Publisher Springer-Verlag
Contributing office(s) Western Fisheries Research Center
Description 9
Larger Work Type Book
Larger Work Subtype Monograph
Larger Work Title Viruses of Lower Vertebrates
First page 442
Last page 450
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