4.1 Article

General and specialized media routinely employed for primary isolation of bacterial pathogens of fishes

Journal

JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE DISEASES
Volume 44, Issue 1, Pages 121-132

Publisher

WILDLIFE DISEASE ASSOC, INC
DOI: 10.7589/0090-3558-44.1.121

Keywords

bacteria; bacteriologic media; culture; fish; freshwater; primary isolation

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There are a number of significant diseases among cultured and free-ranging freshwater fishes that have a bacterial etiology; these represent a variety of grain-negative and grain-positive genera. Confirmatory diagnosis of these diseases involves primary isolation of the causative bacterium on bacteriologic media. Frequently used general bacteriologic media simply provide the essential nutrients for growth. For most 4 the major pathogens, however, there are differential and/or selective media that facilitate primary recovery. Some specialized media are available as ready-to-use from suppliers, while others must be prepared. Differential media employ various types of indicator systems, such as pH indicators, that allow diagnosticians to observe assimilation of selected substrates. An advantage to the use of differential media for primary isolation is that they hasten bacterial characterization by yielding the appropriate positive or negative result for a particular substrate, often leading to a presumptive identification. Selective media also incorporate agent(s) that inhibit the growth of contaminants typically encountered with samples from aquatic environments. Media that incorporate differential and/or selective components are ideally based on characters that are unique to the targeted bacterium, and their use can reduce the time associated with diagnosis and facilitate early intervention in affected fish populations. in this review, the concepts of general and differential/selective bacteriologic media and their use and development for fish pathogens are discussed. The media routinely employed for primary isolation of the significant bacterial pathogens of fishes are presented.

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