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. 2022 Aug 19;13:982973. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.982973

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Clinical symptoms and cumulative survival of E. coioides challenged with V. parahaemolyticus. (A) The clinical symptoms of E. coioides challenged with V. parahaemolyticus. Infected Type 1: fish body color turned black; Infected Type 2: the swelling bleeding symptom was found near abdominal cloaca (white arrow notation); Infected Type 3: there was white patches near the dorsal fin (white arrow notation). (B) The cumulative survival of E. coioides infected with V. parahaemolyticus throughout two weeks. n = 60 biologically independent animals per group.