Hello Morty.
I will be more than happy to expand on my last sentence, and thank you for asking me to do so.
If you are looking for funding, you may have come across a $190 million dollar “Wild Salmon Ecosystems” Initiative by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation in the U.S. Sea Web in Washington D.C. was granted $560,000 for "identification of antifarming audience and issues, integration of aquaculture science messages into antifarming campaign, standardization of antifarming messaging tool-kit, creation of an earned media campaign and co-ordination of media for antifarming ENGOs." According to page 76 of their 2004 tax filing to the Internal Revenue Service, the $560,000 grant to SeaWeb was to provide "a high quality tool-kit and coordination infrastructure for use by ENGOs (environmental organizations) in their campaigns to shift consumer and retailer demand away from farmed salmon." Around the same time, "we do not expect to focus significant resources on salmon restoration in southern British Columbia or the lower 48 states of the U.S.," was on the Moore Foundation’s web site. To date the Moore Foundation has granted over $20 million to organizations in B.C.. All of which are opposed to salmon farming.
Alexandra Morton was profiled as a photographer by Sea Web when Sea Web publicized sea lice research by the David Suzuki Foundation. At the same time, Sea Web was funded to "shift consumer and retailer demand away from farmed salmon."
As for the sea lice study that ENGOs are standing behind in B.C. I would like to give a quote.
“ Lack of quality assurance in the collection of field data. Pink and chum salmon
fry were collected using beach seines and subsampled using dip nets. Sea lice on the fry were generally enumerated without regard to species (Lepeophtheirus salmonis or Caligus clemensi) and then returned to the sea offering no opportunity for independent (blind) verification of the results. No quality assurance procedures are described to insure the accuracy of the counts. A credible quality assurance program would require, at a minimum, blind counts and the recounting of lice on a subset of the fry by independent observers and comparison of the results to insure consistency. Assistance in the field work was offered to Mr. Krkosek for the 2006 field season during a conference call between Mr. Clare Backman (Marine Harvest), Mr. Krkosek and Dr. Brooks. The offer was declined with Mr. Krkosek’s statement that he neither needed nor wanted assistance in conducting the field work. No claim of intentional bias should be inferred from this. However, unintentional bias in scientific work, particularly in field-work, is something that all experienced scientists aggressively guard against.
The Standards, Protocols and Guidelines (SPG-2) developed by the British Columbia
Pacific Salmon Forum for Field Sampling Methods for Juvenile and Adult Pacific Salmon, and Caligid Zooplankton discusses the inherent biases associated with beach seining and dip netting, but fails to recommend quality assurance procedures to insure that collections represent random samples and that counts and identifications of lice are accurate.
That is where my math come’s from Morty. Thank you once again for asking and sunny days to you.