Published July 27, 2012, 07:00 AM

Lake Superior fish may be building immunity to VHS

Three years after the fish-killing disease viral hemorrhagic septicemia was found in Lake Superior, including in the Duluth-Superior harbor, a researcher will come out with a report next week that says for the first time, fish in that lake may have built up immunity to the disease.

By: By Mike Simonson/Wisconsin Public Radio, Superior Telegram

Three years after the fish-killing disease viral hemorrhagic septicemia was found in Lake Superior, including in the Duluth-Superior harbor, a researcher will come out with a report next week that says for the first time, fish in that lake may have built up immunity to the disease.

University of Minnesota Extension Aquaculture specialist Nick Phelps says there’s no doubt viral hemorrhagic septicemia exists in Lake Superior.

“Now that’s good and bad,” Phelps said. “It shows us the virus is surviving in fish, persisting in the wild. That’s the bad part. The good part is it’s not killing them.”

While VHS exists in every Great Lake and there have been large fish kills in four of those water bodies, there has been no fish kills in Lake Superior. Phelps will report to the American Fisheries Conference in La Crosse next week that VHS may not be the great plague after all.

“In some locations, this will no doubt persist and cause long-term mortality events,” he said. “In other locations like Lake Superior, it hasn’t had these outbreaks. Maybe it’s water temperature, maybe it’s population density. No, it’s not going to live up to the hype. That’s just a guess right now. Time will tell.”

But Phelps believes Lake Superior fish have become immune. In his doctoral dissertation that has been four years in the making, Phelps says this immunity may be happening in the other Great Lakes as well, but VHS remains a serious threat.

“How long that’ll last for and whether it’s able to be passed from parent to progeny is unknown still, I think,” Phelps said. “That’s where the time will tell. That’s what we don’t really know.”

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