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Mortalities of Eastern and Pacific Oyster Larvae Caused by the Pathogens Vibrio coralliilyticus and Vibrio tubiashii
Vibrio tubiashii is reported to be a bacterial pathogen of larval Eastern oysters (Crassostrea virginica) and Pacific oysters (Crassostrea
gigas) and has been associated with major hatchery crashes, causing shortages in seed oysters for commercial shellfish
producers. Another bacterium, Vibrio coralliilyticus, a well-known coral pathogen, has recently been shown to elicit mortality in
fish and shellfish. Several strains of V. coralliilyticus, such as ATCC 19105 and Pacific isolates RE22 and RE98, were misidentified
as V. tubiashii until recently. We compared the mortalities caused by two V. tubiashii and four V. coralliilyticus strains in Eastern
and Pacific oyster larvae. The 50% lethal dose (LDâ
â) of V. coralliilyticus in Eastern oysters (defined here as the dose required
to kill 50% of the population in 6 days) ranged from 1.1 x 10â´ to 3.0 x 10â´ CFU/ml seawater; strains RE98 and RE22 were the
most virulent. This study shows that V. coralliilyticus causes mortality in Eastern oyster larvae. Results for Pacific oysters were
similar, with LDâ
âs between 1.2 x 10â´ and 4.0 x 10â´ CFU/ml. Vibrio tubiashii ATCC 19106 and ATCC 19109 were highly infectious
toward Eastern oyster larvae but were essentially nonpathogenic toward healthy Pacific oyster larvae at dosages of ⼠1.1 x 10ⴠCFU/ml. These data, coupled with the fact that several isolates originally thought to be V. tubiashii are actually V. coralliilyticus,
suggest that V. coralliilyticus has been a more significant pathogen for larval bivalve shellfish than V. tubiashii, particularly
on the U.S. West Coast, contributing to substantial hatchery-associated morbidity and mortality in recent years