Predictive blood chemistry parameters for pansteatitis-affected Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus)
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Date
Authors
Bowden, John A.
Cantu, Theresa M.
Chapman, Robert W.
Somerville, Stephen E.
Guillette, Matthew P.
Botha, Hannes
Hoffman, Andre
Luus-Powell, Wilmien J.
Smit, Willem J.
Lebepe, Jeffrey
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Abstract
One of the largest river systems in South Africa, the Olifants River, has experienced significant
changes in water quality due to anthropogenic activities. Since 2005, there have been
various “outbreaks” of the inflammatory disease pansteatitis in several vertebrate species.
Large-scale pansteatitis-related mortality events have decimated the crocodile population
at Lake Loskop and decreased the population at Kruger National Park. Most pansteatitisrelated
diagnoses within the region are conducted post-mortem by either gross pathology
or histology. The application of a non-lethal approach to assess the prevalence and pervasiveness
of pansteatitis in the Olifants River region would be of great importance for the
development of a management plan for this disease. In this study, several plasma-based
biomarkers accurately classified pansteatitis in Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus)
collected from Lake Loskop using a commercially available benchtop blood chemistry
analyzer combined with data interpretation via artificial neural network analysis.
According to the model, four blood chemistry parameters (calcium, sodium, total protein
and albumin), in combination with total length, diagnose pansteatitis to a predictive accuracy
of 92 percent. In addition, several morphometric traits (total length, age, weight) were
also associated with pansteatitis. On-going research will focus on further evaluating the use
of blood chemistry to classify pansteatitis across different species, trophic levels, and within
different sites along the Olifants River.
Description
S1 Fig. Surface plots for the top four predictive parameters (Ca2+, Na+, ALB, and TP) in
relation to standard deviation and total length (with the other three parameters were
clamped). TP (g/dL), ALB (g/dL), Na+ (mmol/L), and Ca2+ (mg/dL).
S1 Table. 2014 Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) morphometric information.
S2 Table. Summarized male tilapia blood chemistry parameters using the blood chemistry analyzer.
S3 Table. Summarized female tilapia blood chemistry parameters using the blood chemistry analyzer.
S4 Table. Summarized trial examination of blood chemistry analysis using species-matched (tilapia) QC sample (n = 7).
S5 Table. Summarized examination of SRM 1950 using a blood chemistry analyzer (n = 7).
S6 Table. Blood chemistry values for SRM 1950 and comparison to noted NIST concentrations.
S1 Table. 2014 Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) morphometric information.
S2 Table. Summarized male tilapia blood chemistry parameters using the blood chemistry analyzer.
S3 Table. Summarized female tilapia blood chemistry parameters using the blood chemistry analyzer.
S4 Table. Summarized trial examination of blood chemistry analysis using species-matched (tilapia) QC sample (n = 7).
S5 Table. Summarized examination of SRM 1950 using a blood chemistry analyzer (n = 7).
S6 Table. Blood chemistry values for SRM 1950 and comparison to noted NIST concentrations.
Keywords
Mozambique tilapia, Kruger National Park (KNP), Epidemics, Olifants River
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Bowden JA, Cantu TM, Chapman RW,
Somerville SE, Guillette MP, Botha H, et al. (2016)
Predictive Blood Chemistry Parameters for
Pansteatitis-Affected Mozambique Tilapia
(Oreochromis mossambicus). PLoS ONE 11(4):
e0153874. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0153874.