Saprolegnia is generally a secondary
pathogen, though in the right circumstances, it can act as primary. It most frequently
targets fish, both in the wild and in tank environments. Through
necrosis of the skin,
Saprolegnia will spread across the surface of its host as a cotton-like film. Though it often stays in the epidermal layers, the mould does not appear to be tissue specific. A
Saprolegnia infection is usually fatal, eventually causing hemodilution, though the time to death varies depending on the initial site of the infection, rate of growth and the ability of the organism to withstand the stress of the infection. The extensive mortalities of
salmon and migratory
trout in the rivers of western
Europe in the 1970s and 1980s in the
UDN outbreak were probably almost all ultimately caused by the secondary
Saprolegnia infections. Historical evidence suggest the
Saprolegnia species affecting Australian freshwater fish may be an introduced strain, imported in the 1800s with exotic salmonid species. ==References==