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1.
Chemosphere ; 60(1): 126-34, 2005 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15910911

ABSTRACT

The causes of disease in cultured shrimp are difficult to ascertain but there is evidence that disease is correlated with environmental factors. Crustaceans are particularly sensitive to insecticides due to their close phylogenetic relationship with insects. The objective of this study was to investigate whether there was an increased susceptibility of the shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei to Vibrio parahaemolyticus, when exposed to methyl parathion. The outline of the study was the following: An LC50 96 h was determined to methyl parathion orally offered to juvenile shrimp. Further experiments were carried out in order to determine a concentration that affected the shrimp (verified by measuring the acethylcholinesterase activity) while producing minimal mortalities. This sublethal concentration was used in a susceptibility experiment where methyl parathion was offered to shrimp which were later injected with V. parahaemolyticus in a dose expected to kill less than 15%. Probit analysis estimated a 96 h median lethal concentration (LC50) of 1.56 microg g(-1). Mortality and AChE activity showed a concentration-response relationship in the exposure treatments. The median inhibitory concentration (IC50) determined was 0.029 microg g(-1). These results suggested that a concentration of 0.1 microg g(-1) was appropriate for the bacteria-pesticide interaction test as it was able to elicit 11.1% mortality after 10 days of exposure, while producing an AChE inhibition of 57.12%. Cumulative mortalities were significantly increased (P<0.01) in the treatment that combined exposure to methyl parathion and V. parahaemolyticus (35.19%) in comparison with methyl parathion or V. parahaemolyticus alone (9.26% and 7.41%, respectively).


Subject(s)
Cholinesterase Inhibitors/toxicity , Insecticides/toxicity , Methyl Parathion/toxicity , Penaeidae/microbiology , Vibrio Infections/microbiology , Vibrio Infections/veterinary , Vibrio parahaemolyticus , Acetylcholinesterase/metabolism , Animal Feed , Animals , Diet , Disease Susceptibility , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Endpoint Determination , Lethal Dose 50
2.
Dis Aquat Organ ; 53(3): 231-40, 2003 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12691194

ABSTRACT

From healthy and diseased penaeid shrimp from Asia and the Americas, 25 luminous and 2 non-luminous bacterial strains were isolated, and 14 were phenotypically identified as Vibrio harveyi; 9 isolates produced significant mortalities (45 to 80%) in Artemia franciscana nauplii at inoculation densities of 10(5) to 10(6) CFU ml(-1) compared to the controls (unchallenged nauplii). The maximum number of bacteria ingested (bioencapsulated) by the Artemia nauplii varied from less than 10 to 10(3) CFU nauplius(-1) and no significant relationship was observed between the density of bacteria inoculated, the amount of bacteria ingested, and naupliar mortality. Significant correlations were obtained between naupliar mortality and production of proteases, phospholipases or siderophores, but not between mortality and lipase production, gelatinase production, hydrophobicity or hemolytic activity. The results suggest that virulence of the strains tested was more related to the production of particular exoenzymes than to the measured colonization factors.


Subject(s)
Artemia/microbiology , Vibrio/pathogenicity , Animals , Colony Count, Microbial , Endopeptidases/metabolism , Luminescent Measurements , Mortality , Phospholipases/metabolism , Siderophores/metabolism , Vibrio/enzymology , Virulence
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