The Hematodinium parasite affects blue crabs and other crustaceans
Knowledge of the parasite's complex life cycle -- gained by rearing
of successive generations across a full year in a VIMS laboratory --
will help guide efforts to understand the transmission of Hematodinium
within crab populations and shrimp farms, and to develop best practices
for the handling of animals within Virginia's fishery for wild-caught
blue crabs.
"Describing the entire life cycle of Hematodinium was an
important breakthrough for us," says Shields. "Having all stages in
culture means we can now really start picking the life cycle apart to
learn what the organism does and how it functions.
"
One important finding, says Shields, is "that we now know that the
development time in culture is around 40-50 days. That matches well with
cycles of infection that we see in the field, which we think occur in
relation to molting in the blue crab."
"We also now realize that the parasite is a broad host generalist,"
he adds. "That's important to know for both modeling and management. You
can't just fish the blue crabs out of an area and expect to get rid of
the pathogen, as it's also present in a number of other host species,
including amphipods, fiddler crabs, spider crabs, mud crabs, and other
swimming crabs."
The team's achievement -- funded in part by a 5-year grant from the National Science Foundation -- was reported in the journal Parasitology,
with Dr. Caiwen Li as lead author. Li authored the paper while a
post-doctoral researcher in Shield's Crustacean Diseases Laboratory on
the VIMS campus in Gloucester Point; he is now a professor at the
Chinese Academy of Sciences' Institute of Oceanology in Qingdao, China.
Hematodinium was first reported from the Eastern Seaboard in
the mid-1970s, and first noted in Virginia's blue crabs in the early
1990s. During disease outbreaks, crab mortality can reach 50% in crab
pots, and 75% in shedding facilities for soft-shell crabs on Virginia's
Eastern Shore. Infections are generally fatal with crabs dying from
energy depletion or disruption of bodily tissues. The disease is not
harmful to humans.
A Growing Global Threat
Dr. Hamish Small, an assistant research scientist in the Shield's Lab at VIMS, began his career studying Hematodinium in lobsters in his native Scotland. He says, "Hematodinium infections are now increasing in frequency and are being encountered in new hosts and locations worldwide."
Crab growers in China reported their first case of Hematodinium in 2004; and, in 2008, other Chinese growers reported a Hematodinium outbreak in shrimp -- the first time the disease has been noted in this popular aquaculture organism.
The Chinese outbreaks are of concern not only in China, but in the
U.S. and other nations as well. NOAA's most recent report on U.S.
fisheries notes that more than 90% of the 4.7 billion pounds of seafood
consumed in the U.S. in 2011 was imported, with shrimp the most popular
item. Moreover, almost half the imports come from aquaculture, with
China -- the world's largest aquaculture grower -- producing 32 million
metric tons of cultured seafood in 2008.
In a recent theme issue of the Journal of Invertebrate Pathology, Small, Shields, and a host of other crustacean-disease experts from across the globe raise concerns about Hematodinium's
growing threat, and its movement between wild and farmed populations.
They note that the parasite likely entered the Chinese crab and shrimp
farms though the filling of ponds using nearby coastal waters, and
caution that it is just as likely to move in the opposite direction --
with transmission from the fertile breeding grounds of crowded crab and
shrimp ponds back into wild populations and fisheries.
In a review of Hematodinium's global diversity and distribution -- published as part of the same theme issue -- Small writes "Hematodinium
infections have the potential to significantly impact wild host
crustacean populations and associated fisheries." In another theme-issue
article, Shields notes that Hematodinium may cause more than $500,000 in losses per year to blue crab fishery in Virginia.
Virginia's Coastal Fishery
Hematodinium most commonly infects younger crabs, with
researchers reporting prevalence levels of 50 to 70% among juvenile blue
crabs from Virginia's seaside bays. "Infections are most prevalent in
saltier waters," says Shields. "You get very high prevalence of
infection on the Eastern Shore, and in coastal bays along the entire
East Coast of the U.S. It affects the smaller fisheries in the coastal
bays."
Shields and his colleagues suspect that the parasite also has a
significant indirect impact on the larger blue-crab fishery within
Chesapeake Bay, with untold losses due to the death of young crabs
before they can complete their migration from coastal spawning grounds
into freshwater tributaries where they might otherwise grow big enough
to harvest.
"The crabs have to come through high-salinity waters as juveniles,"
says Shields, "where we find a very high prevalence of the disease. We
suspect that Hematodinium induces a fairly high mortality load
on the juvenile crabs as they are moving into the Bay. Imagine a harvest
with 50% more crabs and the effect of the parasite becomes quite
clear."
Recent laboratory experiments by Shields and graduate student Anna
Coffey help explain the parasite's inability to survive in fresher
waters. Their findings, reported in the June issue of the Journal of Parasitology, show that Hematodinium
can develop within the body tissues of blue crabs living in
low-salinity conditions, but that the parasite's spores are incapable of
transmission in this environment.
"Infected crabs can move into low-salinity waters," says Shields,
"but any parasites they release can't survive long enough to infect new
crab hosts."
Preventive Measures
Knowledge of Hematodinium's life cycle and routes of
transmission suggests several preventive measures to reduce the
parasite's impact on aquaculture operations and wild fisheries.
"Most of our recommendations for the wild fishery involve changes in
capture and processing methods," says Shields. "There are low-cost
preventative measures to not only stop the spread of disease but to
improve the harvest from the soft-shell industry."
Measures to prevent the spread of Hematodinium and other
crustacean diseases in aquaculture include isolating ponds from nearby
water bodies, stocking ponds with larvae from disease-free hatcheries or
from adult crustaceans that have been certified as disease-free,
educating farmers about best-management practices, and avoiding the
practice of rearing several species together in a single pond, which can
encourage transmission of parasites between susceptible crustaceans.
Genetics: The Next Frontier
The next frontier in Hematodinium research -- under active
pursuit at VIMS with collaborator Professor Kim Reece -- is to improve
understanding of the parasite's genetics, so that researchers can more
accurately and quickly distinguish between related species and track
their interactions as they spread and mingle via ocean currents, natural
movements of their hosts, and human activities such as shipping and
aquaculture.
"It's difficult to tell different species of Hematodinium
apart based just on their external appearance," says Small. "Genetic
tools will allow us to more readily compare characteristics like
virulence, transmission routes, and potential hosts among different
isolates or species."
"The combination of genetic tools with life-cycle studies will make
for a powerful approach to understanding this group of parasites," says
Shields.
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