Myxosporean Parasite (Ceratonova shasta and Parvicapsula minibicornis) Prevalence of Infection in Klamath River Basin Juvenile Chinook Salmon, March – August 2018
Title: Myxosporean Parasite (Ceratonova shasta and Parvicapsula minibicornis) Prevalence of Infection in Klamath River Basin Juvenile Chinook Salmon, March – August 2018
Category: Technical Report
File: Voss_et_al_2018_0508_Myxosporean-Parasite-in-Klamath-Juvenile-Chinook.pdf
Updated Date: 08.08.2019
Author(s)/Source(s): Anne Voss, Kimberly True, J. Scott Foott
Publication Date: 2018-Dec
Focal Topic: Contaminants, Salmon, Water Quality
Location: Klamath Basin
Watershed Code: 180102
Juvenile Klamath River Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) were assayed from late March to August 2018 by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) and histology for myxosporean parasite infection of Ceratonova shasta and Parvicapsula minibicornis. During the first 8 weeks of the season, juvenile Chinook salmon were assayed in real-time for C. shasta. Fish were collected early in the week and processed for necropsy, DNA extraction, and QPCR, in order to provide timely data to fishery managers regarding flow management. Ceratonova shasta prevalence of infection (POI) exceeded the emergency dilution flow criteria of 20% in the Shasta to Scott (K4) reach on April 30th, the 6th week of the monitoring program.
Ceratonova shasta prevalence of infection by QPCR in Chinook salmon collected above the Trinity River confluence during the peak out-migration period (May-July) was 20%, lower than 26% observed in 2017, and 48% in 2016. Parvicapsula minibicornis prevalence of infection in Chinook salmon above the Trinity River confluence for the same time period was 92%, compared to 82% and 89% in 2017 and 2016, respectively.
Among the fish groups tested, naturally produced Chinook salmon had a 11% prevalence of C. shasta infection by QPCR, which was higher than the 5% observed in 2017 but lower than the 27% in 2016. The onset of infection (first detection) in 2018 occurred on April 23 when mean daily river temperature below Iron Gate Dam was 12.5°C. By histology, natural fish sampled from the Shasta to Scott (K4) and Scott to Salmon (K3) reaches from mid-April through the end of May had very low C. shasta POI (0-3%). Ceratonova shasta was not detected in six of the seven sample sets from the two reaches. Additionally, pathology scores were zero for six of seven sample dates, indicating infection levels were well below clinical disease levels in natural Chinook juvenile salmon in the two upper reaches through late spring.
Myxosporean Parasite (Ceratonova shasta and Parvicapsula minibicornis), Juvenile Chinook Salmon,