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Shrimp Bacterial Diseases

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Title: Shrimp Bacterial Diseases


1
Shrimp Bacterial Diseases
2
Shrimp Bacterial Diseases Covered
  • Vibriosis
  • necrotizing hepatopancreatitis
  • epicommensal fouling disease

3
Shrimp Vibriosis
  • Known in Latin America as the Sea Gull Syndrome
    due to shrimp swimming at surface of pond
    (seagulls eat them)
  • numerous etiological agents V. harveyi, V.
    vulnificus, V. parahaemolyticus, V. alginolyticus
  • Wide variety of gram negative motile rods
  • most frequently found in hatcheries, but a big
    problem for young PLs in ponds
  • all shrimp reared under stressful conditions are
    susecptible

4
Shrimp Vibriosis
  • Clinical Signs high mortalities, in PLs, young
    juveniles moribund shrimp appear hypoxic and
    often come to the pond surface or edge sea birds
    preying on shrimp presence of luminescence in
    tanks
  • Presumptive Diagnosis clinical signs, large
    amounts of bacteria in hemolymph, slow clotting,
    melanosis of shell
  • Confirmatory Diagnosis isolation/purification
    with appropriate media (TCBS), API RAPID-NFT
    strips

5
Shrimp Vibriosis commonly affected organs
  • Cuticle
  • hepatopancreas (midgut gland)
  • lymphoid organ
  • antennal gland
  • heart and hemolymph
  • striated muscle

6
Shrimp Vibriosis hepatopancreas
  • Most farms in Central America evaluate shrimp on
    a weekly basis for vibriosis
  • gross signs black spots on cuticle
  • internal signs evaluation of hepatopancreas
    using wet squash and evaluate blind tubules for
    constrictions, presence of G- rods
  • rate HP on a scale of 0-3, 3 being worse
  • medicated feed at 4g/kg oxytet,
    nitrofurizolidone, sarafloxathin (Sarafin)

7
Shrimp Vibriosis
  • Hatchery Control improve husbandry, especially
    in the areas of sanitation, feed quality, water
    source purity, use of probiotics, vaccination
    (Serafin), antibiotics
  • Grow-out Control improve stocking handling to
    reduce stress, have feed in pond in advance of
    stocking, use of molasses and nitrates as
    fertilizers

8
Shrimp Vibriosis
9
Necrotizing Hepatopancreatitis
  • Also known as NHP or Texas Pond Mortality
    Syndrome, for obvious reasons
  • this is a disease of the midgut gland, not, as
    with a vibriosis, the blood
  • bacterium prefers high salinities (gt10 ppt)
  • Agent believed to be a new genus of the
    Protobacteria (alpha) group
  • found from Peru to Texas
  • small, G-, exists in two morphological forms
    (rod-shaped rickettsial-like and flagellated
    helix

10
Necrotizing Hepatopancreatitis
  • Host range P. vannamei, P. aztecus, P.
    setiferus, P. stylirostris, P. californiensis
  • Diagnostic methods presence of massive numbers
    of G- bacteria in HP tubule epithelial cells,
    atrophy of HP, pallid HP color DIG-labeled DNA
    probe using in situ or dot blot hybridization,
    TEM of HP cells showing granulatomous lesions
  • Clnical signs reduced feed intake, empty gut,
    anorexia, poor lw ratios, pallid HP

11
Necrotizing Hepatopancreatitis
  • Simple diagnosis most farmers use wet mounts of
    HP and look for reduced lipid droplets,
    melanization of tubules
  • Control strategy frequent histopathological
    examinations, use of oxytet at 4 g/kg (4,000
    ppm), avoidance of high salinity conditions

12
Necrotizing Hepatopancreatitis
13
Zoea II Syndrome
  • Problem facing hatcheries throughout the western
    hemisphere
  • condition results in heavy mortalities, mainly
    concentrated in the Z2 substage of larval penaeid
    shrimp
  • syndrome a group of signs that occur together
    and characterize a particular abnormality
  • first characterized in a paper by Lorenzo Juarez
    of Grupo Granjas Marinas (Florida)

14
Zoea II Syndrome
  • Because different larval diseases can share
    common clinical signs, it is difficult to
    characterize as distinct pathological agent
  • could be associated with water quality, nutrition
    and/or pathology
  • it is felt to be a distinct syndrome, per se,
    because of its life-stage specificity, remarkable
    similitude of clinical signs reported throughout
    the Americas, not noticed prior to 1993

15
Zoea II Syndrome
  • Species affected P. vannamei and P.
    stylirostris, although primarily the former
  • Clinical signs nauplii appear normal and
    healthy, metamorphose to Z1 and start eating
    normally, long fecal strands are exhibited
  • 36-48 hrs after achieving Z1, first signs appear
    anorexia, evacuation of guts, lethargy, erratic
    swimming, loss of normal pigmentation
  • death due to starvation in Z1-2 molt

16
Zoea II Syndrome
  • Mortality stops at Z3, survivors continue normal
    larval development
  • Internal pathology atrophy of digestive gland,
    inflammation of gut walls
  • Possible etiologies water toxicity, bacterial
    pathogen, viral pathogen (no response to
    antibiotics)
  • 1997 agent determined to be intracellular
    bacteria (found by TEM in HP)
  • as of yet, no known treatment
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