Aphanomycosis of crayfish: crayfish plague

This is the Aphanomycosis of crayfish: crayfish plague report produced by the Environment Agency in 2000. Crayfish plague is an extremely virulent fungal disease of European crayfish species, the white clawed or stone crayfish of Western Europe Austropotamobius pallipes, the Noble crayfish of northern Europe Astacus astacus and the narrow clawed crayfish of Eastern Europe, Astacus leptodactylus. The white claw crayfish A. pallipes is the indigenous native crayfish of the British Isles. Until the early 1980s there were extensive healthy populations of this crayfish in almost all suitable alkaline river and lake environments in England and Wales as far north as Northumberland. The conservation importance of this native crayfish is widely recognised. This report provides a general review of the literature of crayfish plague, including an overview of its spread through the British Isles from CEFAS records. Information on current diagnostic methods from the Office International des Epizooties (OIE) Aquatic Disease Manual is provided. Information on the taxonomy, morphology and physiology of the pathogen is reviewed, together with the pathogenicity and pathology of the disease and current means of prevention and control.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alderman, D.J.
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CEFAS 2000
Subjects:Fisheries, Limnology, Management, Europe, Great Britain, Inland Water, Rivers, Crayfish plague, European crayfish species, Signal crayfish, Population density, Population dynamics, Invasive species, Pathogenicity, Pathology, Fungi diseases,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/27243
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