Diagnostic and molecular evaluation of three iridovirus-associated salamander mortality events

Journal of Wildlife Diseases
By: , and 

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Abstract

In 1998 viruses were isolated from tiger salamander larvae (Ambystoma tigrinum diaboli and A. tigrinum melanostictum) involved in North Dakota and Utah (USA) mortality events and spotted salamander (A. maculatum) larvae in a third event in Maine (USA). Although sympatric caudates and anurans were present at all three sites only ambystomid larvae appeared to be affected. Mortality at the North Dakota site was in the thousands while at the Utah and Maine sites mortality was in the hundreds. Sick larvae were lethargic and slow moving. They swam in circles with obvious buoyancy problems and were unable to remain upright. On the ventral surface, near the gills and hind limbs, red spots or swollen areas were noted. Necropsy findings included: hemorrhages and ulceration of the skin, subcutaneous and intramuscular edema, swollen and pale livers with multifocal hemorrhage, and distended fluid-filled intestines with areas of hemorrhage. Light microscopy revealed intracytoplasmic inclusions, suggestive of a viral infection, in a variety of organs. Electron microscopy of ultra thin sections of the same tissues revealed iridovirus-like particles within the inclusions. These viruses were isolated from a variety of organs, indicating a systemic infection. Representative viral isolates from the three mortality events were characterized using molecular assays. Characterization confirmed that the viral isolates were iridoviruses and that the two tiger salamander isolates were similar and could be distinguished from the spotted salamander isolate. The spotted salamander isolate was similar to frog virus 3, the type species of the genus Ranavirus, while the tiger salamander isolates were not. These data indicate that different species of salamanders can become infected and die in association with different iridoviruses. Challenge assays are required to determine the fish and amphibian host range of these isolates and to assess the susceptibility of tiger and spotted salamanders to heterologous virus isolates.

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Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Diagnostic and molecular evaluation of three iridovirus-associated salamander mortality events
Series title Journal of Wildlife Diseases
DOI 10.7589/0090-3558-39.3.556
Volume 39
Issue 3
Year Published 2003
Language English
Publisher Wildlife Disease Association
Contributing office(s) National Wildlife Health Center
Description 11 p.
First page 556
Last page 566
Country United States
State Maine, North Dakota, Utah
County Aroostook County, Burleigh County
Other Geospatial Lake Desolation
Online Only (Y/N) N
Additional Online Files (Y/N) N
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