Faisal Mohamed, Loch Thomas P, Shavalier Megan, VanDeuren Michelle Gunn, Standish Isaac, Winters Andrew, Glenney Gavin, Aho James, Wolgamood Martha, VanAmberg Jan, Eisch Edward, Whelan Gary E
Department of Pathobiology and Diagnostic Investigation, College of Veterinary Medicine, Michigan State University, 1129 Farm Lane, Room 177K, East Lansing, Michigan, 48824, USA.
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Michigan State University, 1129 Farm Lane, Room 177K, East Lansing, Michigan, 48824, USA.
J Aquat Anim Health. 2019 Mar;31(1):31-45. doi: 10.1002/aah.10051. Epub 2019 Jan 25.
Over the past century, populations of Lake Trout Salvelinus namaycush have declined throughout the Great Lakes basin due to overfishing, habitat destruction, introduction of invasive species, and associated recruitment issues from high thiaminase, as well as emerging infectious diseases. To combat these declines, state and federal fishery management agencies undertook substantial stock enhancement efforts, including more stringent regulation of sport and commercial catch limits and increasing hatchery propagation of Lake Trout stocked into Great Lakes basin waterways. One state fish hatchery involved in these rehabilitation efforts experienced mass mortality events in 2012 and 2017. In 2012, following a period of abnormally heavy rain, hatchery staff observed abnormal behavior followed by increased mortalities in two strains of Lake Trout fingerlings, reaching upwards of 20% mortality and totaling a loss of approximately 100,000 fish. In 2017, following another heavy-rain season, 6-8% of 2-year-old Lake Trout experienced morbidity and mortality similar to that observed in 2012. During the 2012 event, Brook Trout Salvelinus fontinalis and splake (Lake Trout × Brook Trout hybrid) reared in flow-through systems receiving water from diseased Lake Trout remained clinically unaffected. Molecular analyses revealed all lots of affected Lake Trout were infected with the salmonid herpesvirus-3 (epizootic epitheliotropic disease virus [EEDV]), a disease that caused complete depopulation of this hatchery in the late 1980s and until 2012 was never again detected in this hatchery or in Michigan. Further sampling detected EEDV in apparently healthy 5-year-old Lake Trout and in wild Mottled Sculpin Cottus bairdii collected in the hatchery source water. The ability of the virus to replicate in tissues of infected fish was verified by exposing naïve Lake Trout to the filtered tissue homogenates of infected fish resulting in similar disease signs. Despite the virus going undetected for many years, these two EEDV episodes clearly demonstrate the continued presence of this deadly herpesvirus in the Great Lakes basin.
在过去的一个世纪里,由于过度捕捞、栖息地破坏、入侵物种的引入、高硫胺素酶导致的相关繁殖问题以及新出现的传染病,大湖鳟(Salvelinus namaycush)的种群数量在整个大湖盆地都有所下降。为了应对这些下降趋势,州和联邦渔业管理机构进行了大量的种群增强工作,包括对休闲和商业捕捞限额进行更严格的监管,以及增加投放到大湖盆地水道中的湖鳟的孵化场繁殖数量。参与这些恢复工作的一家州鱼类孵化场在2012年和2017年经历了大规模死亡事件。2012年,在一段异常暴雨期之后,孵化场工作人员观察到两种湖鳟鱼苗出现异常行为,随后死亡率上升,死亡率高达20%以上,总计损失约10万条鱼。2017年,在又一个暴雨季节之后,2岁的湖鳟中有6 - 8%出现了与2012年观察到的类似的发病和死亡情况。在2012年的事件中,饲养在从患病湖鳟接收水的流水系统中的溪鳟(Salvelinus fontinalis)和斯普雷克(湖鳟×溪鳟杂交种)在临床上未受影响。分子分析显示,所有受影响的湖鳟批次都感染了鲑鱼疱疹病毒-3(流行性上皮嗜性疾病病毒[EEDV]),这种疾病在20世纪80年代末导致该孵化场的鱼全部死亡,直到2012年在该孵化场或密歇根州都未再次检测到。进一步的采样在看似健康的5岁湖鳟以及在孵化场水源中采集的野生斑驳杜父鱼(Cottus bairdii)中检测到了EEDV。通过将未感染的湖鳟暴露于感染鱼的过滤组织匀浆中,验证了病毒在感染鱼组织中的复制能力,结果导致了类似的疾病症状。尽管这种病毒多年未被检测到,但这两起EEDV事件清楚地表明,这种致命的疱疹病毒在大湖盆地持续存在。