Article

Bacillary necrosis in farmed Pangasius hypophthalmus (Sauvage) from the Mekong Delta, Vietnam

Details

Citation

Ferguson H, Turnbull J, Shinn A, Thompson K, Dung TT & Crumlish M (2001) Bacillary necrosis in farmed Pangasius hypophthalmus (Sauvage) from the Mekong Delta, Vietnam. Journal of Fish Diseases, 24 (9), pp. 509-513. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2761.2001.00308.x

Abstract
This is the first description of an economically important disease of intensively reared Pangasius hypophthalmus from the Mekong Delta. Major presenting signs included an increase in mortality that would not respond to treatment, and at necropsy, the presence of numerous white necrotic and pyogranulomatous foci throughout the viscera, notably in spleen, liver and kidney. Despite the confounding presence in earlier samples of numerous, primarily renal, myxosporean parasites, the common denominator amongst these and samples from eight subsequently sampled sites was the presence of moderate-to-large numbers of bacilli in all typical lesions. These bacteria were subsequently isolated and tentatively identified as a Bacillus sp. Pilot studies experimentally reproduced similar lesions approximately 7 days following intraperitoneal injection of the bacteria.

Keywords
Bacillus sp.; Pangasius hypophthalmus; pathology; Vietnam

Journal
Journal of Fish Diseases: Volume 24, Issue 9

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2001
Date accepted by journal10/05/2001
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/10252
PublisherWiley-Blackwell
ISSN0140-7775

People (2)

Professor Margaret Crumlish

Professor Margaret Crumlish

Professor, Institute of Aquaculture

Professor Hugh Ferguson

Professor Hugh Ferguson

Emeritus Professor, Institute of Aquaculture