Effect of high water temperature on betanodavirus infection of fingerling humpback grouper Cromileptes altivelis

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Abstract

Fingerling humpback grouper Cromileptes altivelis, experimentally infected with a betanodavirus (RGNNV genotype), were kept at 27°C, 31°C or 35°C for 14 days. The numbers of dead fish in ten fish at each water temperature were five at 27°C, two at 31°C and one at 35°C. The coat protein gene of the virus was detected by RT-PCR from four survivors at 27°C, two survivors at 31°C, but not from survivors at 35°C. Histopathologically, vacuolation in the retinal tissues was observed in three survivors at 27°C, but not in survivors at 31°C or 35°C. These results suggest that high water temperature inhibits the viral proliferation in fish. © 2007 The Japanese Society of Fish Pathology.

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Yuasa, K., Koesharyani, I., & Mahardika, K. (2007). Effect of high water temperature on betanodavirus infection of fingerling humpback grouper Cromileptes altivelis. Fish Pathology, 42(4). https://doi.org/10.3147/jsfp.42.219

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