Vulnerability to
predation and physiological stress responses in juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus
tshawytscha) experimentally infected with Renibacterium salmoninarum
Matthew G. Mesa, Thomas P. Poe, Alec G. Maule, and Carl B. Schreck
Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci./J. Can. Sci. Halieut. Aquat. 55(7): 1599-1606 (1998)
Abstract: We
experimentally infected juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)
with Renibacterium salmoninarum (Rs), the causative agent of bacterial
kidney disease (BKD), to examine the vulnerability to predation of fish with
differing levels of Rs infection and assess physiological change during
progression of the disease. Immersion challenges conducted during 1992 and 1994
produced fish with either a low to moderate (1992) or high (1994) infection
level of Rs during the 14-week postchallenge rearing period. When equal numbers
of treatment and unchallenged control fish were subjected to predation by
either northern squawfish (Ptychocheilus oregonensis) or smallmouth bass
(Micropterus dolomieui), Rs-challenged fish were eaten in significantly
greater numbers than controls by nearly two to one. In 1994, we also sampled
fish every 2 weeks after the challenge to determine some stressful effects of
Rs infection. During disease progression in fish, plasma cortisol and lactate
increased significantly whereas glucose decreased significantly. Our results
indicate the role that BKD may play in predator-prey interactions, thus
ascribing some ecological significance to this disease beyond that of direct
pathogen-related mortality. In addition, the physiological changes observed in
our fish during the chronic progression of BKD indicate that this disease is
stressful, particularly during the later stages.