Ultrasonography is a non-invasive method that can be used to assess sex and maturity of ®sh. This study was conducted to examine the feasibility of using ultrasound images to sex juvenile and mature halibut Hippoglossus hippoglossus (Linnaeus), mature winter Pleuronectes americanus (Walbaum) and yellowtail¯ounder Pleuronectes ferruginea (Storer) and mature haddock Melanogrammus aegle®nus (Linnaeus). In females, both immature and mature ovaries were relatively easy to distinguish, but in males only mature testes were consistently distinguishable. Ovarian maturation of haddock and ovulatory cycles of halibut may also be assessed using ultrasound.
Filamentous black yeasts from the genus Exophiala are ubiquitous, opportunistic pathogens causing both superficial and systemic mycoses in warm- and cold-blooded animals. Infections by black yeasts have been reported relatively frequently in a variety of captive and farmed freshwater and marine fishes. In November 2012, moribund and recently dead, farm-raised Atlantic Halibut Hippoglossus hippoglossus were necropsied to determine the cause of death. Histopathology revealed that three of seven fish were affected by a combination of an ascending trans-ductual granulomatous mycotic nephritis, necrotizing histiocytic encephalitis, and in one fish the addition of a fibrogranulomatous submucosal branchitis. Microbial cultures of kidney using selective mycotic media revealed pure growth of a black-pigmenting septated agent. Application of molecular and phenotypic taxonomy methodologies determined that all three isolates were genetically consistent with Exophiala angulospora. This is the first report of E. angulospora as the causal agent of systemic mycosis in Atlantic Halibut.
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