Trichodinidae in commercial fish in South America.

Ciliates of the family Trichodinidae are protozoan parasites of importance for fish farming in South America, given that at high infestation levels, they cause significant mortality among farmed fish. Although data on economic losses due to parasitosis are not available for South America, mortality outbreaks correlated to trichodinids are very common in the tilapia production chain, especially in Brazil, the largest aquaculture chain in the country. In Brazil in the past, trichodinids were considered only as Trichodina sp. Today, they have been better studied and identified taxonomically in wild and farmed fish. However, in other countries in South America, trichodinids continue to be described only as Trichodina sp. This review presents the history of occurrences of trichodinids in fish of interest in South America, highlighting 15 new species that have been described in three genera in Brazil, along with information on parasite-host-environment relationships, diagnostic methods and treatments. The occurrence of parasitic ciliates must be correlated with farming conditions such as stress factors, water quality, seasonality, age and host immunity to elucidate the critical points of each production system. Furthermore, for tropical fish, studies on treatment against trichodinid species are needed to provide support for approval of antiparasitic medications for use in fish farming. However, it is recommended that the production sector use intensive production systems that are more sustainable, with biosafety protocols, to increase production and productivity.

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Main Authors: MACIEL, P. O., GARCIA, F., CHAGAS, E. C., FUJIMOTO, R. Y., TAVARES-DIAS, M.
Other Authors: PATRICIA OLIVEIRA MACIEL, CNPASA; FABIANA GARCIA, APTA; EDSANDRA CAMPOS CHAGAS, CPAA; RODRIGO YUDI FUJIMOTO, CPATC; MARCOS TAVARES DIAS, CPAF-AP.
Format: Artigo de periódico biblioteca
Language:English
eng
Published: 2017-08-14
Subjects:Peixe, Doença animal, Parasito, Protozoario, Aquicultura., Fish diseases, Aquaculture, Parasites, Protozoa, Trichodina,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1073965
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spelling dig-alice-doc-10739652018-03-07T00:34:10Z Trichodinidae in commercial fish in South America. MACIEL, P. O. GARCIA, F. CHAGAS, E. C. FUJIMOTO, R. Y. TAVARES-DIAS, M. PATRICIA OLIVEIRA MACIEL, CNPASA; FABIANA GARCIA, APTA; EDSANDRA CAMPOS CHAGAS, CPAA; RODRIGO YUDI FUJIMOTO, CPATC; MARCOS TAVARES DIAS, CPAF-AP. Peixe Doença animal Parasito Protozoario Aquicultura. Fish diseases Aquaculture Parasites Protozoa Trichodina Ciliates of the family Trichodinidae are protozoan parasites of importance for fish farming in South America, given that at high infestation levels, they cause significant mortality among farmed fish. Although data on economic losses due to parasitosis are not available for South America, mortality outbreaks correlated to trichodinids are very common in the tilapia production chain, especially in Brazil, the largest aquaculture chain in the country. In Brazil in the past, trichodinids were considered only as Trichodina sp. Today, they have been better studied and identified taxonomically in wild and farmed fish. However, in other countries in South America, trichodinids continue to be described only as Trichodina sp. This review presents the history of occurrences of trichodinids in fish of interest in South America, highlighting 15 new species that have been described in three genera in Brazil, along with information on parasite-host-environment relationships, diagnostic methods and treatments. The occurrence of parasitic ciliates must be correlated with farming conditions such as stress factors, water quality, seasonality, age and host immunity to elucidate the critical points of each production system. Furthermore, for tropical fish, studies on treatment against trichodinid species are needed to provide support for approval of antiparasitic medications for use in fish farming. However, it is recommended that the production sector use intensive production systems that are more sustainable, with biosafety protocols, to increase production and productivity. 2018-03-07T00:34:02Z 2018-03-07T00:34:02Z 2017-08-14 2018 2018-05-02T11:11:11Z Artigo de periódico Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries, v. 28, n. 1, p. 33-56, Mar. 2018. http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1073965 DOI 10.1007/s11160-017-9490-1 en eng openAccess
institution EMBRAPA
collection DSpace
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-alice
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de EMBRAPA
language English
eng
topic Peixe
Doença animal
Parasito
Protozoario
Aquicultura.
Fish diseases
Aquaculture
Parasites
Protozoa
Trichodina
Peixe
Doença animal
Parasito
Protozoario
Aquicultura.
Fish diseases
Aquaculture
Parasites
Protozoa
Trichodina
spellingShingle Peixe
Doença animal
Parasito
Protozoario
Aquicultura.
Fish diseases
Aquaculture
Parasites
Protozoa
Trichodina
Peixe
Doença animal
Parasito
Protozoario
Aquicultura.
Fish diseases
Aquaculture
Parasites
Protozoa
Trichodina
MACIEL, P. O.
GARCIA, F.
CHAGAS, E. C.
FUJIMOTO, R. Y.
TAVARES-DIAS, M.
Trichodinidae in commercial fish in South America.
description Ciliates of the family Trichodinidae are protozoan parasites of importance for fish farming in South America, given that at high infestation levels, they cause significant mortality among farmed fish. Although data on economic losses due to parasitosis are not available for South America, mortality outbreaks correlated to trichodinids are very common in the tilapia production chain, especially in Brazil, the largest aquaculture chain in the country. In Brazil in the past, trichodinids were considered only as Trichodina sp. Today, they have been better studied and identified taxonomically in wild and farmed fish. However, in other countries in South America, trichodinids continue to be described only as Trichodina sp. This review presents the history of occurrences of trichodinids in fish of interest in South America, highlighting 15 new species that have been described in three genera in Brazil, along with information on parasite-host-environment relationships, diagnostic methods and treatments. The occurrence of parasitic ciliates must be correlated with farming conditions such as stress factors, water quality, seasonality, age and host immunity to elucidate the critical points of each production system. Furthermore, for tropical fish, studies on treatment against trichodinid species are needed to provide support for approval of antiparasitic medications for use in fish farming. However, it is recommended that the production sector use intensive production systems that are more sustainable, with biosafety protocols, to increase production and productivity.
author2 PATRICIA OLIVEIRA MACIEL, CNPASA; FABIANA GARCIA, APTA; EDSANDRA CAMPOS CHAGAS, CPAA; RODRIGO YUDI FUJIMOTO, CPATC; MARCOS TAVARES DIAS, CPAF-AP.
author_facet PATRICIA OLIVEIRA MACIEL, CNPASA; FABIANA GARCIA, APTA; EDSANDRA CAMPOS CHAGAS, CPAA; RODRIGO YUDI FUJIMOTO, CPATC; MARCOS TAVARES DIAS, CPAF-AP.
MACIEL, P. O.
GARCIA, F.
CHAGAS, E. C.
FUJIMOTO, R. Y.
TAVARES-DIAS, M.
format Artigo de periódico
topic_facet Peixe
Doença animal
Parasito
Protozoario
Aquicultura.
Fish diseases
Aquaculture
Parasites
Protozoa
Trichodina
author MACIEL, P. O.
GARCIA, F.
CHAGAS, E. C.
FUJIMOTO, R. Y.
TAVARES-DIAS, M.
author_sort MACIEL, P. O.
title Trichodinidae in commercial fish in South America.
title_short Trichodinidae in commercial fish in South America.
title_full Trichodinidae in commercial fish in South America.
title_fullStr Trichodinidae in commercial fish in South America.
title_full_unstemmed Trichodinidae in commercial fish in South America.
title_sort trichodinidae in commercial fish in south america.
publishDate 2017-08-14
url http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1073965
work_keys_str_mv AT macielpo trichodinidaeincommercialfishinsouthamerica
AT garciaf trichodinidaeincommercialfishinsouthamerica
AT chagasec trichodinidaeincommercialfishinsouthamerica
AT fujimotory trichodinidaeincommercialfishinsouthamerica
AT tavaresdiasm trichodinidaeincommercialfishinsouthamerica
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