Tg. Rand et al., A hyphomycete fungus, Paecilomyces lilacinus, associated with wasting disease in two species of Tilapia from Puerto Rico, J AQUAT A H, 12(2), 2000, pp. 149-156
The hyphomycete Paecilamyces lilacinus was isolated from internal tissue sa
mples of a hatchery-raised blue tilapia Tilapia aurea and three of nine fer
al Mozambique tilapias T. mossambica suffering from tilapia wasting disease
in Puerto Rico. Gross cultural and microscopical features of this fungus c
losely resemble those of P. farinosis and P. marquandii, both of which have
been previously isolated from fish tissues. They also resemble features of
P. fumoso-roseus, a species that has been isolated from a captive tortoise
. However, the species from tilapia can be distinguished from these other s
pecies of Paecilomyces by its production of a brown exudate on Czapek yeast
agar (CYA), its deep brown reverse coloration on CYA and Blakeskee malt ex
tract agar (MEA), and its longer, more slender, solitary phialides. It can
be further differentiated from these species by growth at 37 degreesC, whic
h is absent in the other three species. Externally, infected fish were emac
iated and had sunken eyes and relatively large heads. They also had eroded
fins and hemorrhagic, occasionally scaleless lesions up to 5 cm wide on the
ir flanks. Internally, their gastrointestinal tracts and body cavities cont
ained a clear, light amber fluid. Infections were also marked by the presen
ce of numerous golden to reddish-brown granulomas, 0.3-1.3 mm wide, through
out the internal organs. Histopathology revealed that granulomas in spleen,
kidney, and liver samples from the blue tilapia and from 12 of 18 Mozambiq
ue tilapias collected between 1992 and 1998 were composed of necrotic foci
containing invading hyphae, hyphal fragments, conidia, and mixed cellular a
nd caseous material. Bacteria were not observed in the lesion material. As
tilapia wasting disease is an apparently common and fatal disease in the Ma
ndri and Santa Teresa lagoons, we recommend that further studies be underta
ken to determine the source and route of infection for possible control mea
sures.