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A novel parasite is blamed for infecting fish at 3 Oregon hatcheries

Rainbow trout are seen at the Bonneville Hatchery in Oregon.
Sheila Sund
/
Creative Commons
Rainbow trout are seen at the Bonneville Hatchery in Oregon.

State wildlife officials have killed more than 100,000 fish that were infected with a newly-identified parasite. It鈥檚 the first time that organism has been linked to illness in Oregon trout.

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has killed around 160,000 rainbow trout from three hatcheries, located outside Klamath Falls, Roseburg and Port Orford, to prevent the spread of a myxozoan parasite.

The organism is known to be present in the Pacific Northwest but this is the first time it has been blamed for causing illness in Oregon鈥檚 fish stock. The microscopic parasite commonly infects a worm before moving to a fish, where it can cause illness and death. Scientists hypothesized a species of that organism of Montana salmon in 2016.

Oregon State University and ODFW researchers are examining a sample of 500 sick trout to learn more about how and when those fish may have been infected. There are some 2,400 different species of myxozoa. The agency doesn鈥檛 yet know which infected these fish.

鈥淲e're hoping we can find out more about it because with the change in climate, warmer rivers 鈥 those conditions favor pathogens. It may be that we see this or something else again,鈥 said Michelle Dennehy, spokesperson with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Dennehy said her agency鈥檚 fish health lab, which monitors the spread of pathogens, has become increasingly important as a 鈥渇irst line of defense鈥 against possible contagions.

The agency raises and releases around 3.8 million rainbow trout per year for fishing and has over 100,000 surplus stock to make up for losses. So anglers shouldn鈥檛 notice a difference this year, said Dennehy.

She said her department will also be reviewing hatchery infrastructure to find better ways to keep fish populations healthy.

Justin Higginbottom is a regional reporter for 老夫子传媒. He's worked in print and radio journalism in Utah as well as abroad with stints in Southeast Asia and the Middle East. He spent a year reporting on the Myanmar civil war and has contributed to NPR, CNBC and Deutsche Welle (Germany鈥檚 public media organization).