An outbreak of serious mortality among the cultured groupers
Epinephelus coioides, characterized by a swollen intestine containing yellow fluid, occurred in the summer of 1993 in Taiwan. A motile strain
EmI82KL was isolated from the intestinal yellow fluid of the moribund groupers with tryptic soy agar supplemented with 2%
NaCl and/or thiosulfate citrate bile salt sucrose agar. This strain was characterized and identified as
Vibrio carchariae and was susceptible to chloramphenicol, doxycycline-HCl, nalidixic acid, oxolinic acid, oxytetracycline, and sulfonamide
while resistant to ampicillin and penicillin G. In addition, the strain was neither auto-agglutinating nor hemagglutinating,
but it was hemolytic against erythrocytes from sheep, rabbit, tilapia, and grouper. The bacteria could be reisolated from
kidney, liver, and the transparent yellow fluid of swollen intestine of moribund groupers after bacterial challenge and re-identified
as the same species. The LD
50 value was 2.53 × 10
7 colony forming units/g grouper body weight.
Received: 26 December 1996 / Accepted: 20 February 1997