39 results match your criteria: "Midwest Fisheries Center[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • Researchers collected 4 freckled madtoms from a creek in Arkansas to study their organs for the presence of myxozoans during specific months in 2021, 2022, and 2023.
  • Of the collected fish, 1 was found to have a novel myxozoan infection in its gallbladder, making it a 25% infection rate among the sample size.
  • The study included detailed morphological and molecular analysis, revealing new findings about myxozoans and their relationship with fish in southern North America, marking the first time these organisms have been reported in madtoms' gallbladders.
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Forty-two species of myxozoans, including 31 species of Myxobolus Bütschli, 1882, have been described from centrarchid fishes. One species, the green sunfish (Lepomis cyanellus), has been reported to host at least three species of Myxobolus. Between March 2023 and June 2024, 42 L.

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Octomacrum spinum Dansby & Shoemaker, 1973, is reported for the first time from 23 of 146 (16%) highland stonerollers, Campostoma spadiceum collected from central and western Arkansas and southeastern Oklahoma, USA. Analysis of molecular data revealed that the SSU rRNA gene of specimens of O. spinum from Arkansas was identical to a number of Octomacrum spp.

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Freshwater mussels (order: Unionida) are highly imperiled globally and are increasingly the focus of captive propagation efforts to protect and restore wild populations. The Upper Tennessee River Basin (UTRB) in Virginia is a freshwater biodiversity hotspot hosting at least 45 of North America's ~300 species of freshwater mussels, including 21 threatened and endangered species listed under the U.S.

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During March 2023, 7 green sunfish (Lepomis cyanellus) and 2 bluegill (Lepomis macrochirus) were collected from the Black River (White River drainage) in Lawrence County, Arkansas. In addition, during March 2023 and again in May-June 2023, 13 L. cyanellus and 6 L.

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Channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) are a food fish extensively reared in aquaculture facilities throughout the world and are also among the most abundant wild catfish species in North America, making them a popular target of anglers. Furthermore, channel catfish are important members of aquatic ecosystems; for example, they serve as a glochidial host for the endangered winged mapleleaf mussel (Quadrula fragosa), making them critical for conserving this species through hatchery-based restoration efforts. During a routine health inspection, a novel aquareovirus was isolated from channel catfish used in mussel propagation efforts at a fish hatchery in Wisconsin.

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Studies of marine fish have revealed distant relatives of viruses important to global fish and animal health, but few such studies exist for freshwater fish. To investigate whether freshwater fish also host such viruses, we characterized the viromes of five wild species of freshwater fish in Wisconsin, USA: bluegill (), brown trout (), lake sturgeon (), northern pike (), and walleye (). We analyzed 103 blood serum samples collected during a state-wide survey from 2016 to 2020 and used a metagenomic approach for virus detection to identify known and previously uncharacterized virus sequences.

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During May 2022 and again in March 2023, 5 quillbacks, Carpiodes cyprinus, were collected from the Verdigris River, Wagoner County, Oklahoma (n = 1), and the Black River, Lawrence County, Arkansas (n = 4), and their gill, gallbladder, fins, integument, musculature, and other major organs were macroscopically examined for myxozoans. Gill lamellae from the single quillback from the Verdigris River was infected with a new myxozoan, Thelohanellus oklahomaensis n. sp.

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Biologists monitoring freshwater mussel (order Unionida) populations rely on behavioral, often subjective, signs to identify moribund ("sick") or stressed mussels, such as gaping valves and slow response to probing, and they lack clinical indicators to support a diagnosis. As part of a multi-year study to investigate causes of reoccurring mortality of pheasantshell ( synonym ) in the Clinch River, Virginia and Tennessee, USA, we analyzed the hemolymph metabolome of a subset of mussels from the 2018 sampling period. Mussels at the mortality sites were diagnosed in the field as affected (case) or unaffected (control) based on behavioral and physical signs.

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Viruses of Freshwater Mussels during Mass Mortality Events in Oregon and Washington, USA.

Viruses

August 2023

Department of Pathobiological Sciences and Freshwater & Marine Sciences Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.

Freshwater mussels (Unionida) are globally imperiled, in part due to largely unexplained mass mortality events (MMEs). While recent studies have begun to investigate the possibility that mussel MMEs in the Eastern USA may be caused by infectious diseases, mussels in the Western USA have received relatively little attention in this regard. We conducted a two-year epidemiologic investigation of the role of viruses in ongoing MMEs of the Western pearlshell () and the Western ridged mussel () in the Chehalis River and Columbia River watersheds in the Western USA.

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American bullfrogs are thought to be carriers of ranaviruses and contribute to their global spread via trade. Bullfrog tadpoles succumb to ranaviral infection's more severe and deadly effects than bullfrog adults. Presently, little is known about bullfrog tadpoles' innate antiviral immunity, possible due to the lack of available bullfrog tadpole cell lines.

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Article Synopsis
  • Rhabdoviruses exhibit significant genomic variation and ecological diversity despite their rarity of recombination.
  • The study identifies two novel rhabdoviruses from freshwater mussels, KILLV-1 and CHMFV-1, showcasing unique features like gene duplication and pseudogenization.
  • The reproductive cycle of freshwater mussels, which involves a parasitic stage in finfish, is suggested as a likely mechanism for viral host-switching.
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Recent bacteriological investigations of freshwater mussel mortality events in the southeastern United States have identified a variety of bacteria and differences in bacterial communities between sick and healthy mussels. In particular, and spp. have been shown to be associated with moribund mussels, although it remains unclear whether these bacteria are causes or consequences of disease.

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Objective: The ability to effectively treat parasitic infestations of fish is of high importance for fish culture facilities. However, tools or approved therapies for treating infestations on fish are limited. This paper summarizes results from four separate clinical field studies that evaluated the efficacy of hydrogen peroxide (H O ; 35% PEROX-AID) for reducing Gyrodactylus spp.

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Article Synopsis
  • The southern striped shiner, Luxilus chrysocephalus isolepis, is a large minnow collected from various watersheds in Arkansas for a study on myxozoan infections.
  • A new species of myxozoan, Myxobolus carlhubbsi n. sp., was identified in 34% of the sampled fish, particularly in Sevier County, showing specific symptoms in the gills.
  • The study provides morphological and molecular analysis of this parasite, with findings registered in the Official Register of Zoological Nomenclature, marking the first report of a myxozoan in this fish species.
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Freshwater Mussels Show Elevated Viral Richness and Intensity during a Mortality Event.

Viruses

November 2022

Department of Pathobiological Sciences and Freshwater & Marine Sciences Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53711, USA.

Freshwater mussels (Unionida) are among the world's most imperiled taxa, but the relationship between freshwater mussel mortality events and infectious disease is largely unstudied. We surveyed viromes of a widespread and abundant species (mucket, ; syn: ) experiencing a mortality event of unknown etiology in the Huron River, Michigan, in 2019-2020 and compared them to viromes from mucket in a healthy population in the St. Croix River, Wisconsin and a population from the Clinch River, Virginia and Tennessee, where a mortality event was affecting the congeneric pheasantshell (; syn: ) population.

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Pseudomurraytrema fergusoni n. sp. is described from the Pealip Redhorse, Moxostoma pisolabrum from the Black River (White River drainage), Lawrence County, Arkansas, USA.

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During October and November 2021, 33 creek chubs, Semotilus atromaculatus, were collected from 3 sites in Polk County, Arkansas (Ouachita River drainage), and their gills, gallbladder, fins, integument, musculature, and other major organs were examined for myxozoans. The gills of 9 (27%) were infected with a new myxozoan, Myxobolus fountainae n. sp.

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In July of 2018 and 2019, wild fish health surveys were conducted along the Wisconsin and Minnesota portions of the upper Mississippi River. Spring viremia of carp virus (SVCV) was isolated from Common Carp Cyprinus carpio as well as a newly identified host species, the Quillback Carpiodes cyprinus. Sanger sequencing of the gene encoding for the G protein revealed a high similarity of the Quillback isolate to various SVCV isolates identified from Common Carp that were collected during earlier wild fish health surveys and mortality events in the USA.

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Freshwater mussels (Unionida) are suffering mass mortality events worldwide, but the causes remain enigmatic. Here, we describe an analysis of bacterial loads, community structure, and inferred metabolic pathways in the hemolymph of pheasantshells () from the Clinch River, USA, during a multi-year mass mortality event. Bacterial loads were approximately 2 logs higher in moribund mussels (cases) than in apparently healthy mussels (controls).

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Gyrodactylus mediotorus King, Marcogliese, Forest, McLaughlin and Bentzen, 2013, previously described from the spottail shiner Notropis hudsonius (Clinton) in the St. Lawrence River, Quebec, was identified from weed shiner Notropis texanus (Girard) in Wisconsin. The parasite was primarily observed to infect the fins and, to a lesser extent, the skin.

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Urocleidus sayani n. sp. is described from the gills of pirate perch (Aphredoderus sayanus) in the Wisconsin backwaters of the upper Mississippi River and was found in samples from the Southeastern United States.

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Freshwater unionid bivalves currently face severe anthropogenic challenges. Over 70% of species in the United States are threatened, endangered or extinct due to pollution, damming of waterways and overfishing. These species are notable for their unusual life history strategy, parasite-host co-evolution and biparental mitochondrial inheritance.

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Mass mortality in freshwater mussels (Actinonaias pectorosa) in the Clinch River, USA, linked to a novel densovirus.

Sci Rep

September 2020

Department of Pathobiological Sciences and Freshwater and Marine Sciences Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1656 Linden Drive, Madison, WI, 53706, USA.

Freshwater mussels (order Unionida) are among the world's most biodiverse but imperiled taxa. Recent unionid mass mortality events around the world threaten ecosystem services such as water filtration, nutrient cycling, habitat stabilization, and food web enhancement, but causes have remained elusive. To examine potential infectious causes of these declines, we studied mussels in Clinch River, Virginia and Tennessee, USA, where the endemic and once-predominant pheasantshell (Actinonaias pectorosa) has suffered precipitous declines since approximately 2016.

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Gyrodactylid parasites were observed on non-native populations of North-American freshwater catfishes, Ameiurus nebulosus and Ameiurus melas (Siluriformes: Ictaluridae), at several sites in the Elbe River basin, Czech Republic, Europe. Using a combination of morphological and genetic analyses, the parasites infecting A. nebulosus were determined to be Gyrodactylus nebulosus, a North American parasite co-introduced to Europe along with its Ameiurus fish hosts.

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