Whirling disease: re‐emergence among wild trout
- 1 December 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Immunological Reviews
- Vol. 166 (1) , 365-376
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-065x.1998.tb01276.x
Abstract
Summary: Whirling disease of rainbow trout is caused by Myxobolus cerebralis, a myxozoan parasite possessing a life cycle well adapted to the natural environments where salmonid fish are found. Whirling disease was first described in Europe in 1898 among farmed rainbow trout but recent occurrences have been devastating to wild trout in North America. The disease is considered a major threat to survival of wild rainbow trout in the intermountain west of the United States. Difficulties in containing the spread and potentially eliminating the pathogen are tied to features of a complex life cycle involving two hosts, the salmonid fish and an aquatic oligochaete. Details of the morphologic development of the parasite have been described in each host but only now are we beginning to appreciate the breadth of interactions between these developmental forms and the sequential responses of the host. Fundamental mechanisms of the recognition and attachment of the parasite to the hosts, how host immunity is evaded and the unknown influences of environmental factors all contribute to a rather poor understanding of the biology of the parasite. Although the biology and ecology of the salmonid host are better known than for the oligochaete host, our knowledge is inadequate to interpret their complex interactions with the parasite. This uncertainty precludes the development of effective management activities designed to enhance the viability and productivity of wild trout populations in M. cerebralis‐ positive river systems. Improving our understanding of the hosts, the parasite and the environmental factors determining their interaction should provide for more focused and effective control methods for containing the spread and devastating effects whirling disease is causing to our wild trout populations.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phylogenetic Analysis of Complete Small Subunit Ribosomal RNA Coding Region of Myxidium lieberkuehni: Evidence that Myxozoa are Metazoa and Related to the BilateriaArchiv für Protistenkunde, 1996
- Whirling disease: earliest susceptible age of rainbow trout to the triactinomyxid of Myxobolus cerebralisAquaculture, 1991
- Salmonid whirling disease: myxosporean and actinosporean stages cross‐react in direct fluorescent antibody testJournal of Fish Diseases, 1989
- Biology Contravenes Taxonomy in the Myxozoa: New Discoveries Show Alternation of Invertebrate and Vertebrate HostsScience, 1984
- Myxosoma cerebralis (Myxozoa: Myxosporea) Etiologic Agent of Salmonid Whirling Disease Requires Tubificid Worm (Annelida: Oligochaeta) in its Life CycleThe Journal of Protozoology, 1983
- Myxosoma cerebralis: Inactivation of Spores by Hot Smoking of Infected TroutCanadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 1982
- Control of whirling disease (Myxosoma cerebralis): use of methylene blue staining as a possible indicator of effect of heat on sporesJournal of Fish Biology, 1977
- Fish Age as Related to Susceptibility to Myxosoma cerebralis, Cause of Whirling DiseaseThe Progressive Fish-Culturist, 1974
- The Spread of Myxosoma Cerebralis into Native Trout Populations in MichiganThe Progressive Fish-Culturist, 1972
- Host Susceptibility and the Effect of Aging, Freezing, Heat, and Chemicals on Spores of Myxosoma CerebralisThe Progressive Fish-Culturist, 1969