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DOI

  • Yuichi Furumoto
    The University of Tokyo
  • Makoto Kanamori
    Hakodate Fisheries Research Institute
  • Masafumi Natsuike
    Hakodate Fisheries Research Institute
  • Miku Kawahara
    The University of Tokyo
  • Tomoyoshi Yoshinaga
    The University of Tokyo
  • Naoki Itoh
    The University of Tokyo
Field surveys of the bacterium Francisella halioticida infection among intermediate-cultured juvenile scallops Mizuhopecten yessoensis in southern Hokkaido revealed that the mortality of juvenile scallops was positively associated with the prevalence of F. halioticida, and that both mortality and prevalence increased in September and January. ​In the intermediate culture experiments, juvenile scallops reared under high density during September and October resulted in high prevalence of F. halioticida and scallop mortality after October, while rearing density from October to March was not associated with infection and mortality, indicating that the high rearing density between September and October determined the infection of F. halioticida and scallop mortality in the following period. ​Furthermore, shell deformity rates, as a proposed index for poor physiological condition of juvenile scallops, were high in the experimental groups with higher density from September to October. ​The high rearing density in this term may have caused a decline in physiological status and, reduced resistance to francisellosis in juvenile scallops, although there is still a possibility that shell deformity was caused by francisellosis.

Keywords

  • Francisella, aquaculture, Rearing density, shell deformity, scallop, pathogen, Japan
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)8-14
JournalFish Pathology
Volume58
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Mar 2023
Externally publishedYes
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