Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

An Investigation into the Scallop Parasite Outbreak on the Mid-Atlantic Shelf: Transmission Pathways, Spatio-Temporal Variation of Infection and Consequences to Marketability : Final Report

Rudders, David
Roman, Sally
Fisher, Robert A.
Bushek, David
Munroe, Daphne
Bochenek, Eleanor A.
McGurk, Emily
Borsetti, Sarah
Abstract
A disease epizootic has developed that threatens one of the most valuable fisheries in the US. The U.S. sea scallop (Placopecten magellanicus) fishery landed $512 million worth of scallop meats in 2017 (NMFS, 2018). This fishery is based on landings of scallop adductor muscles only, with the remainder of the scallop discarded at sea (NEFSC, 2018). During the spring of 2015 both industry and scientific assessment crews noted unprecedented numbers of a parasitic nematode in the adductor muscle of captured scallops (Figure 1). The presence of the parasite in the adductor muscle is expressed through macroscopic lesions, or cysts. These lesions are rust-brown to orange/brown in color with a typically elongated shape, ranging from 2 -12 mm in length and 1 - 4 mm in width. Nearly all lesions were observed along the exterior edge of the adductor muscle between the mantle velar folds of both valves opposite the catch muscle (sweet-meat). This location on the adductor muscle is anatomically adjacent to the kidney-adductor muscle attachment site and opposite of scallop intestine and anus. Infected scallops were observed in the southern portion of the stock and corresponded with the re-opening of three spatial management areas in this region. The wide distribution of the observed parasite is of concern from a product marketability standpoint and may represent the early stages of an expansion of parasite prevalence and intensity. Preliminary investigations suggest that the nematode observed is Sulcasaris sulcata (Rudders and Roman, 2018a).
Description
Date
2019-05-29
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Download Dataset
Rights Holder
Usage License
Embargo
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Marine Resource Reports Research and Technical Reports, Sea scallop fishery, Sulcascaris sulcata
Citation
Advisor
Department
Virginia Institute of Marine Science
DOI
https://doi.org/10.25773/m6xq-nq36
Embedded videos