Pfiesteria blamed unfairly for fish sores?The so-called cell from hell has been unfairly blamed for opening bloody sores on fish, say government researchers. All the fuss over fish-killing Pfiesteria has obscured a more probable culprit for the lesions, a fungal disease described in the 1980s, according to a statement released last week by fish pathologist Vicki Blazer of the U.S. Geological Survey's Leetown (W. Va.) Science Center. Pfiesteria dinoflagellates dinoflagellates minute aquatic protozoa; they produce red pigment and toxins which are taken up by shellfish without apparent ill effect, but the toxin is not metabolized and the shellfish may poison animals if eaten. have made headlines during the past decade as the main suspect in fish kills and a possible cause of neurological damage in people along coastal waterways in mid-Atlantic states, especially North Carolina and Maryland (SN: 9/27/97, p. 202). Yet one of the most striking images from these disasters, oozing oozing exudation of fluid. lesions as big as a quarter on silvery menhaden menhaden: see herring. menhaden or pogy Any of several species of Atlantic coastal fishes (genus Brevoortia of the herring family), used for oil, fish meal (mainly for animal feed), and fertilizer. , may not be the work of Pfiesteria at all. "I do not dispute that you can produce lesions with Pfiesteria, but you cannot produce these lesions," Blazer says. Pfiesteria toxins act fast, certainly within several hours, she observes, yet the sores she analyzed microscopically showed inflammations that needed perhaps two weeks to develop. She checked sores on fish that died in Maryland's kills during 1997 as well as on fish collected in the same region but not during a kill. In more than 95 percent of all the fish, Blazer found fingerlike growths, strands of invading fungus surrounded by inflamed fish tissue with thick buildups of immune-system cells. "The fish kills, I do believe, were caused by Pfiesteria," Blazer says. "We need to separate fish kills from fish lesions." Michael J. Mac, who is based in Reston, Va., directs the Geological Survey's fishery research program. He puts the implications simply: "If lesions can be caused by a fungus, then it's not a good indicator of Pfiesteria." That's bad news for fishery managers in Maryland, who use a high number of lesions as one of the warning signs in deciding whether to close off waterways to keep people away from a developing Pfiesteria outbreak and its toxins. Worse, Mac says "we don't have any other suggestions" for simple field tests for Pfiesteria. That's why Pfiesteria researcher JoAnn M. Burkholder of North Carolina State University History
Burkholder has not swayed fish pathologist Wolfgang Vogelbein of the Virginia Institute of Marine Science in Gloucester Point. "There have always been doubts among fish pathologists," he says. "They have seen the condition in menhaden every year." His work parallels Blazer's analysis showing that the sores do not come from Pfiesteria. "It's impossible," he says. "They're old." So is the fungus idea. Mycologist mycologist a specialist in mycology. Michael J. Dykstra from North Carolina State and his colleagues started publishing papers in the 1980s describing ulcers common on menhaden. The researchers saw no direct link to toxic algae algae (ăl`jē) [plural of Lat. alga=seaweed], a large and diverse group of primarily aquatic plantlike organisms. These organisms were previously classified as a primitive subkingdom of the plant kingdom, the thallophytes (plants that blooms. "You can find fish with lesions when there's no kill," Dykstra points out. Instead, they focused on the fungi that showed up prominently in the sores, including Aphanomyces. Fungi of that genus drill gory sores in fish near Australia, Japan, India, and Thailand. Aphanomyces species, with spores that have an uncommon ability to swim This article is about swimming in animals. For human swimming, see Swimming. Swimming is the ability to move through water's surface while partially or totally submerged in it. , also attack European crayfish crayfish or crawfish, freshwater crustacean smaller than but structurally very similar to its marine relative the lobster, and found in ponds and streams in most parts of the world except Africa. Crayfish grow some 3 to 4 in. (7.6–10. and cause root rot in peas, notes David Rizzo, who teaches mycology mycology Study of fungi (see fungus), including mushrooms and yeasts. Many fungi are useful in medicine and industry. Mycological research has led to the development of such antibiotic drugs as penicillin, streptomycin, and tetracycline. at the University of California, Davis The University of California, Davis, commonly known as UC Davis, is one of the ten campuses of the University of California, and was established as the University Farm in 1905. . Closely related fungi often have wide-ranging tastes, Rizzo says. He points out that a relative of the Dutch elm disease Dutch elm disease: see diseases of plants; elm. Dutch elm disease Widespread disease that kills elms, caused by the fungus Ceratocystis ulmi. It was first identified in the U.S. fungus infects human lymph glands. However, the whole focus on finding the bleeding gun that causes fish sores distresses Dykstra. "Nutrient loading [phosphorus and nitrogen pollution] is probably more important than any specific pathogen because it's behind all the pathogens," he says. |
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