VIMS scientists have discovered that a new species of bacteria is largely responsible for a
disease outbreak among Chesapeake Bay striped bass. The new species, which they named Mycobacterium shottsii, is closely
related to M. marinum, a species known to infect both fish and humans.
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VIMS researchers are working to understand the extent
and severity of mycobacteriosis in Chesapeake Bay striped bass, the environmental conditions in the Bay
that influence development of the disease, and potential impacts on striped bass stocks. The VIMS effort
is part of a larger cooperative study with investigators from the
Fish Health Branch of the U.S.
Geological Survey's Leetown Science Center in West Virginia, the
Virginia Marine Resource Commission,
and from institutions and agencies in Maryland.
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