Resistance to Saprolegnia parasitica infection: A heritable trait in Atlantic salmon

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Abstract

A controlled Saprolegnia parasitica infection model was used to challenge 1158 fish representing 105 pedigreed Atlantic salmon families to evaluate the possibility of selecting for Saprolegnia resistance in a commercial breeding programme. Fish were infected in five study tanks and observed for 40 days post-infection for lesion score and survival. Survival analysis of the top 10 resistant and bottom 10 susceptible families indicated that the hazard of dying following Saprolegnia infection was 1509% higher in susceptible families. In all fish, a 10 g increase in weight correlated with a 7.8% increase in the hazard of dying while sex did not affect mortality. Resistance to Saprolegnia was estimated to have a heritability of 0.25, indicating that selection is possible. Genetic and phenotypic correlations indicated that the 11-point scoring system, developed in this study to quantify Saprolegnia infection severity, had a high negative correlation with survival as days to mortality at ≥−0.922(±0.005), suggesting that the scoring method could help assess lesion development in studies where mortality is not the primary biological endpoint.

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APA

Misk, E., Gonen, S., & Garber, A. F. (2022). Resistance to Saprolegnia parasitica infection: A heritable trait in Atlantic salmon. Journal of Fish Diseases, 45(9), 1333–1342. https://doi.org/10.1111/jfd.13664

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