Campus Life

Parasite-Resistant “Super” Trout

Geneticists at Utah State University are testing various trout species to determine which of the fish are most resistant to the whirling disease parasite. A strain of rainbow trout found in Montana has shown a stronger resistance to the parasite than Utah’s state fish, the Bonneville cutthroat. Researchers plan to create a brood stock to test in whirling disease-infected waters.
 
From “Whirling disease hasn’t hit Utah as hard as other areas,” by Brett Prettyman, The Salt Lake Tribune, March 10, 2005. For more information, contact Phaedra Budy, assistant professor, Department of Aquatic, Watershed and Earth Resources, Utah State University, 435-797-7564.

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