Volume 13, Issue 2 p. 96-104
Article

Evaluation of Commercially Prepared Transport Systems for Nonlethal Detection of Aeromonas salmonicida in Salmonid Fish

Rocco C. Cipriano

Corresponding Author

Rocco C. Cipriano

National Fish Health Research Laboratory, U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources Division, 1700 Leetown Road Kearneysville, West Virginia, 25430 USA

Corresponding author: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Graham L. Bullock

Graham L. Bullock

Freshwater Institute, The Conservation Fund, Post Office Box 1889, Shepherdstown, West Virginia, 25443 USA

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First published: 09 January 2011
Citations: 4

Abstract

In vitro studies indicated that commercially prepared transport systems containing Amies, Stuart's, and Cary–Blair media worked equally well in sustaining the viability of the fish pathogen Aeromonas salmonicida, which causes furunculosis. The bacterium remained viable without significant increase or decrease in cell numbers for as long as 48 h of incubation at 18–20°C in Stuart's transport medium; consequently, obtaining mucus samples in such tubes were comparable to on-site detection of A. salmonicida by dilution plate counts on Coomassie Brilliant Blue agar. In three different assays of 100 samples of mucus from Atlantic salmon Salmo salar infected subclinically with A. salmonicida, dilution counts conducted on-site proved more reliable for detecting the pathogen than obtaining the samples in the transport system. In the on-site assays, dilution counts detected the pathogen in 34, 41, and 22 samples, whereas this was accomplished in only 15, 15, and 3 of the respective samples when the transport system was used. In an additional experiment, Arctic char Salvelinus alpinus sustaining a frank epizootic of furunculosis were sampled similarly. Here, too, dilution counts were more predictive of the prevalence of A. salmonicida and detected the pathogen in 46 mucus samples; in comparison, only 6 samples collected by using the transport system were positive. We also observed that the transport system supported the growth of the normal mucus bacterial flora. Particularly predominant among these were motile aeromonads and Pseudomonas fluorescens. In studies of mixed culture growth, two representatives of both of the latter genera of bacteria outgrew A. salmonicida—in some cases, to the total exclusion of the pathogen itself.