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1 July 1986 QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE STUDIES OF GUT FLORA IN STRIPED BASS FROM ESTUARINE AND COASTAL MARINE ENVIRONMENTS
Richard D. MacFariane, John J. McLaughlin, G. L. Bullock
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Abstract

Examination of the intestinal contents of 130 striped bass (Morone saxatilis) collected from the Hudson River and Long Island Sound during May to October 1981 showed that opportunistic fish pathogens—especially Aeromonas hydrophila—predominated in samples from both locations. Other isolates from both groups of striped bass included Vibrio, pseudomonads, flavobacteria, Alcaligenes, and enterics. Small numbers of Micrococcus, Bacillus, Corynebacterium, and Acinetobacter were also isolated. Total numbers of bacteria in the intestines were 100 to 1,000 times higher in striped bass from the Hudson River than in those from Long Island Sound.

MacFariane, McLaughlin, and Bullock: QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE STUDIES OF GUT FLORA IN STRIPED BASS FROM ESTUARINE AND COASTAL MARINE ENVIRONMENTS
Richard D. MacFariane, John J. McLaughlin, and G. L. Bullock "QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE STUDIES OF GUT FLORA IN STRIPED BASS FROM ESTUARINE AND COASTAL MARINE ENVIRONMENTS," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 22(3), 344-348, (1 July 1986). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-22.3.344
Received: 7 October 1985; Published: 1 July 1986
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