Mass mortality of
hatchery-reared milkfish (Chanos chanos) and mangrove red snapper (Lutjanus
argentimaculatus) caused by Amyloodinium ocellatum
(Dinoflagellida)
E.R. Cruz-Lacierda, Y. Maeno, A.J.T. Pineda, V.E.
Matey-2004
Aquaculture, 236(1-4): 85-94
Abstract:
Outbreaks of heavy infestation by the parasitic
dinoflagellate Amyloodinium ocellatum in hatchery-reared milkfish (Chanos
chanos) and mangrove red snapper (Lutjanus argentimaculatus)
caused 100% mortality events in hatcheries in the Philippines. Parasites
were recorded on the body surface in 14-day-old milkfish fry and on both
skin and gills in 2-month-old snapper. Trophonts of A. ocellatum
caused local erosions of fish skin and degeneration of epithelial cells at
the sites of the parasite's attachment to the body surface. Separation and
hyperplasia of gill epithelium and fusion of secondary lamellae at the
distal parts of the gill filaments were common. High pathogenicity of A.
ocellatum to fish may be attributed to the severe alterations of the
fish gills, the disruption of the host's skin, and feeding of trophonts on
hosts' epithelial cells. In-vivo treatments of A. ocellatum-infested
snapper with a 1 h freshwater bath and 200 ppm H2O2
showed promising results. This is the first report of A. ocellatum
infestation in milkfish and mangrove red snapper in the Philippines.
(Fish Health Section, Aquaculture Department,
Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, Tigbauan 5021, Iloilo,
Philippines, eclacier@aqd.seafdec.org.ph)