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Assessment of infectious salmon anaemia virus prevalence for different groups of farmed Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L., in New Brunswick.

Authors :
McClure CA
Hammell KL
Dohoo IR
Nerette P
Hawkins LJ
Source :
Journal of fish diseases [J Fish Dis] 2004 Jul; Vol. 27 (7), pp. 375-83.
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Abstract Infectious salmon anaemia (ISA) virus (ISAV) has been causing disease in New Brunswick since 1996. As a control measure, all fish in an outbreak cage are killed. The objective of this study was to compare ISAV prevalence in cages experiencing an outbreak with healthy cages from the same farm, neighbouring farms and distant farms. Atlantic salmon from five different groups were tested using an RT-PCR test. Groups included moribund fish from a cage experiencing an outbreak (A), healthy fish from an outbreak cage (B), healthy fish from a negative cage from a farm experiencing an outbreak in a different cage (C), healthy fish from a negative farm near an outbreak farm (D), and healthy fish sampled at a negative farm located in an area with only negative farms (E). Apparent prevalences (standard error) for the different groups (A-E) were 0.94 (+/-0.026), 0.41 (+/-0.062), 0.29 (+/-0.040), 0.08 (+/-0.037) and 0.08 (+/-0.037), respectively. All groups were significantly different (P < 0.002) from each other except for groups B and C and groups D and E. Because the prevalence of the virus was significantly higher in the outbreak cage (B) compared with other sites, early harvest of outbreak cages will remove one source of virus. However, ISA negative cages (C) that remain on the positive farm may potentially act as a viral reservoir.<br /> (Copyright 2004 Blackwell Publishing Ltd)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0140-7775
Volume :
27
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of fish diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
15228607
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2761.2004.00547.x