Salmon, trout and carp 'under threat from parasite'
By Roger Highfield, Science Editor
(Filed: 23/06/2005)

A parasite capable of wiping out species of fish in Europe, notably salmon,
trout and carp, has been discovered by scientists.

The infectious disease, a type of micro-organism called a protist, is
carried by the topmouth gudgeon and, though it leaves its host fish
unharmed, it kills other species by destroying internal organs.

The gudgeon is a small, grey type of minnow. Being the most invasive fish in
Europe, it could spread the parasite and cause a drastic fall in the
diversity of freshwater fish, according to the scientists.

Today, in the journal Nature, a team working in Dorset for the Centre for
Ecology and Hydrology, Winfrith, and the Centre for the Environment,
Fisheries & Aquaculture Science, Weymouth, describes how the disease has
already stopped the European sunbleak, an endangered species of minnow, from
spawning.

This could lead to its eventual extinction. Sunbleak populations have
declined sharply in the past 40 years, matching the rise in numbers of the
topmouth gudgeon, which has spread rapidly since its introduction into
Romanian ponds close to the Danube in the 1960s.

Dr Rodolphe Gozlan, lead author of the report, said: "The new disease is
already affecting other freshwater fish such as the fathead minnow and may
affect native UK fish species.

"This parasite could threaten commercial fisheries, including salmon farms."

So far the team has found 24 populations of topmouth gudgeon across England
and Wales that threaten the rivers Kent, Yorkshire Ouse, Trent, Thames,
Medway, Itchen, Test and Severn with invasion.

The team is now assessing whether the parasite has played a role in the
decline of the following European species, which occurred after introduction
of topmouth gudgeon: rudd, crucian carp, brown bullhead, bitterling and
gudgeon.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/06/23/nfish23.xml&;
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