Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira (May 2011)

Selection of shrimp breeders free of white spot syndrome and infectious hypodermal and hematopoietic necrosis

  • Carlos Cesar de Mello Junior,
  • Gael Yvan Leclercq Delsol,
  • Emmerik Motte,
  • Virna Alexia Cedeño Escobar,
  • Pedro Filipe Rey,
  • Mauricio Laterça Martins,
  • Luis Alejandro Vinatea Arana,
  • Giovanni Lemos de Mello,
  • Alvaro Pestana de Farias,
  • Xavier Antonio Serrano Arguello,
  • John Erick Montaño Maridueña

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-204X2011000500011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46, no. 5
pp. 530 – 536

Abstract

Read online

The objective of this work was to select surviving breeders of Litopenaeus vannamei from white spot syndrome virus (WSSV) outbreak, adapted to local climatic conditions and negatively diagnosed for WSSV and infectious hypodermal and hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHHNV), and to evaluate if this strategy is a viable alternative for production in Santa Catarina, Brazil. A total of 800 males and 800 females were phenotypically selected in a farm pond. Nested-PCR analyses of 487 sexually mature females and 231 sexually mature males showed that 63% of the females and 55% of the males were infected with IHHNV. Animals free of IHHNV were tested for WSSV, and those considered double negative were used for breeding. The post-larvae produced were stocked in nine nursery tanks for analysis. From the 45 samples, with 50 post-larvae each, only two were positive for IHHNV and none for WSSV. Batches of larvae diagnosed free of virus by nested-PCR were sent to six farms. A comparative analysis was carried out in growth ponds, between local post-larvae and post-larvae from Northeast Brazil. Crabs (Chasmagnathus granulata), blue crabs (Callinectes sapidus), and sea hares (Aplysia brasiliana), which are possible vectors of these viruses, were also evaluated. The mean survival was 55% for local post-larvae against 23.4% for post-larvae from the Northeast. Sea hares showed prevalence of 50% and crabs of 67% of WSSV.

Keywords