lates calcarifer
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Animals ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 133
Author(s):  
Aslah Mohamad ◽  
Fathin-Amirah Mursidi ◽  
Mohd Zamri-Saad ◽  
Mohammad Noor Azmai Amal ◽  
Salleh Annas ◽  
...  

Vibriosis is one of the most common threats to farmed grouper; thus, substantial efforts are underway to control the disease. This study presents an oral vaccination against multiple Vibrio spp. in a marine fish with double booster immunisation. The Vibrio harveyi strain VH1 vaccine candidate was selected from infected groupers Epinephelus sp. in a local farm and was formalin inactivated and combined with commercial feed at a 10% ratio (v/w). A laboratory vaccination trial was conducted for seventy days. The induction of IgM antibody responses in the serum of Asian seabass Lates calcarifer immunised with the oral Vibrio harveyi strain VH1 was significantly (p < 0.05) increased as early as week one post-primary vaccination. Subsequent administration of the first and second booster for 5 consecutive days, starting on days 14 and 42, respectively, improved the specific antibody level and reached a highly significant (p < 0.05) value at days 35 and 49 before slightly decreasing from day 56 onwards. Antibody titres of the control unvaccinated group remained relatively stable and low throughout the experimental period. At the end of the 70-day vaccination trial, 23 days post final boost, an intraperitoneal challenge with a field strain of Vibrio harveyi, V. alginolyticus, and V. parahaemolyticus was carried out. Our challenge study showed that oral Vibrio harveyi strain VH1 vaccine candidate could induce significant protection, with an RPS of 70–80% against different Vibrio species. Thereafter, a field trial was conducted in a mariculture farm to study the effect of field vaccination using the oral Vibrio harveyi strain VH1 vaccine candidate. A total of 3000 hybrid grouper juveniles were divided into two groups in triplicate. Fish of Group 1 were not vaccinated, while Group 2 were vaccinated with the feed-based vaccine. Vaccinations were carried out on days 0, 14, and 42 via feeding the fish with the vaccine at 4% body weight for 5 consecutive days. At the end of the study period, the fish survival rate was 80% for the vaccinated group, significantly (p < 0.05) higher than the 65% seen in the control unvaccinated group. Furthermore, the vaccinated fish showed significantly (p < 0.05) better growth performances. Therefore, the oral Vibrio vaccine from the inactivated Vibrio harveyi strain VH1 is a potential versatile vaccine candidate that could stimulate good immune responses and confer high protection in both Asian seabass, Lates calcarifer, and farm hybrid grouper Epinephelus fuscoguttatus × Epinephelus lanceolatus.


Author(s):  
Chantana Kaewtapee ◽  
Karun Thongprajukaew ◽  
Tun Jittanoon ◽  
Nutt Nuntapong ◽  
Kannika Preedaphol ◽  
...  

Aquaculture ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 546 ◽  
pp. 737400
Author(s):  
Harriet R. Goodrich ◽  
Rod W. Wilson ◽  
Richard Smullen ◽  
Andrew C. Barnes ◽  
Craig E. Franklin
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Author(s):  
Hanna Scheuffele ◽  
Francesc Rubio-Gracia ◽  
Timothy D. Clark

Aerobic metabolic scope is a popular metric to estimate the capacity for temperature-dependent performance in aquatic animals. Despite this popularity, little is known of the role of temperature acclimation and variability in shaping the breadth and amplitude of the thermal performance curve for aerobic scope. If daily thermal experience can modify the characteristics of the thermal performance curve, interpretations of aerobic scope data from the literature may be misguided. Here, tropical barramundi (Lates calcarifer) were acclimated for ∼4 months to cold (23℃), optimal (29℃) or warm (35℃) conditions, or to a daily temperature cycle between 23 and 35℃ (with a mean of 29℃). Measurements of aerobic scope were conducted every 3-4 weeks at three temperatures (23℃, 29℃ and 35℃), and growth rates were monitored. Acclimation to constant temperatures caused some changes in aerobic scope at the three measurement temperatures via adjustments in standard and maximal metabolic rates, and growth rates were lower in the 23℃-acclimated group compared with all other groups. The metabolic parameters and growth rates of the thermally variable group remained similar to those of the 29℃-acclimated group. Thus, acclimation to a variable temperature regime did not broaden the thermal performance curve for aerobic scope. We propose that aerobic scope thermal performance curves are more plastic in amplitude rather than breadth, and that the metabolic phenotype of at least some fish may be more dependent on the mean daily temperature rather than on the daily temperature range.


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