News Release
New Genetic Test Can Detect Clam Disease Crippling Shellfish Industry and Threatening Aquaculture Operations
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
October 17, 2005
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
A sensitive new genetic test can now detect a crippling disease called
QPX occurring in clam beds from Cape Cod south to Virginia and
north to Canada. Although it does not affect humans and it is not as well known as red tide, the disease
can have a significant impact on a local economy by killing clams and devastating shellfish harvests and commercial
aquaculture operations.
QPX - for quahog parasite unknown - is a single-celled organism related
to slime mold. It was first detected in 1995 in Provincetown, MA and
spread to nearby clam beds, killing nine of ten clams in many of the
beds. The disease spreads from clam to clam, infecting the clam by
secreting a thick mucus layer to insulate itself from the clam’s immune
system.
Rebecca Gast, an associate scientist in the Biology Department at Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), has developed a genetic test to
detect the organism not only in clams but in seawater and sediment.
Since QPX also decomposes seaweed, researchers now believe it can be
found in all coastal waters but doesn’t become deadly to clams until it
reaches a critical concentration in the water.
Gast notes that although red tide got a lot of media attention this
year, QPX is actually a bigger problem. The toxins that cause red tide
in clams and other shellfish in New England do not kill the shellfish
and will wash away once the red tide bloom diminishes, eventually
making the shellfish safe to eat. QPX kills the clams, and there is no
known cure.
Gast is working with Roxanna Smolowitz, a veterinarian at the nearby
Marine Biological Laboratory, to find out what triggers the organisms
to reach concentrations that become deadly, and whether that threshold
varies among clam strains. Smolowitz uses traditional microscopic
examination of tissues to determine if clams are sick.
Gast’s genetic test can now also be used to ensure clams without
visible symptoms are not carrying the disease. With the disease
spreading along the East Coast and no cure, the researchers say the best solution for shellfishermen and aquaculture
operations is to keep infection levels as low as possible and try to
keep seed clams free of the disease. One possible remedy may be
rotating shellfish crops, much like farmers do on land.
Originally published: October 17, 2005

