An Evaluation of Treatments to Reduce
Mortality from Coagulated Yolk Disease in Hatchery-Produced Chinook Salmon
S.R. Boyd-2001
North American
Journal of Aquaculture, 63(3): 246–251
Abstract:
Three treatments were evaluated for their
effectiveness in reducing the mortality of hatchery-produced fry of chinook
salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha from coagulated yolk disease (CYD).
The treatments consisted of (1) incubation of eggs and alevins in untreated
(unfiltered, ambient temperature) water, (2) incubation of eggs and alevins
in water supplemented with CaCl2 to increase total hardness, and
(3) incubation of eyed eggs and rearing of alevins on plastic substrates.
Mortality was significantly greater in the untreated water treatment than in
the control (filtered and chilled water) overall (43.1% versus 24.7%) and
for all life stages: green egg (24.0% versus 19.3%), eyed egg (8.9% versus
4.5%), alevin (2.5% versus 0.3%), and fry (15.7% versus 2.0%). The pattern
of mortality in untreated water during the fry life stage was similar to
that reported in the literature for CYD-infected fish. Mortality during the
green egg life stage of fish treated with CaCl2 was significantly
greater than in the control (22.2% versus 19.3%), and losses appeared to be
unrelated to CYD. There was no significant difference in mortality
associated with the use of plastic substrates or CaCl2
supplementation when the water supply was filtered and maintained below 14.0°C.
The use of CaCl2, artificial substrates, and chillers during
incubation did not prevent coagulated yolk disease from occurring in the
Mokelumne River Fish Hatchery, but filtering and maintaining water
temperatures below 14.0°C during incubation did reduce losses of chinook
salmon that contracted CYD.
(East Bay Municipal Utility District, 1 Winemasters Way, Suite K, Lodi, California 95240, USA)