1. Diets containing corn naturally contaminated with deoxynivalenol reduces the susceptibility of rainbow trout ( Oncorhynchus mykiss) to experimental Flavobacterium psychrophilum infection.
- Author
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Ryerse, Ian A, Hooft, Jamie M, Bureau, Dominique P, Anthony Hayes, M, and Lumsden, John S
- Subjects
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RAINBOW trout , *FISH feeds , *DEOXYNIVALENOL , *FLAVOBACTERIUM , *BACTERIAL diseases in fishes , *CORN as feed , *DISEASE susceptibility , *FOOD contamination , *PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine if deoxynivalenol (DON) exposure alters the susceptibility of rainbow trout to bacterial coldwater disease caused by Flavobacterium psychrophilum. Rainbow trout were fed a nutritionally complete diet containing corn that was naturally contaminated with DON at a desired concentration of <0.5 (control and pair-fed treatments), 4 or 6 ppm over 7 weeks to apparent satiation. After 4 weeks, fish were infected by intraperitoneal injection with F. psychrophilum (3.03x106 CFU mLâ1) via intraperitoneal injection and monitored for morbidity and mortality. A significant linear reduction in feed intake was associated with increasing dietary levels of DON contamination over the initial 4 weeks. There was a significant reduction ( P < 0.05) in cumulative per cent mortality in DON-fed groups (4.1 ppm, 11%; 5.9 ppm, 7%) in comparison to control (46%) and pair-fed (25%) groups at 21 days post infection. Mortality of trout pair-fed the control diet was also significantly lower ( P < 0.05) than the control group fed to apparent satiation. A replicate trial using genetically similar fish and the same experimental design produced similar results. These results suggest that DON exposure and restricted feed intake provided a protective effect for rainbow trout infected with F. psychrophilum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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