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Author Topic: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon  (Read 291803 times)

alwaysfishn

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #270 on: December 07, 2011, 06:25:44 PM »

Well thanks Chris, I guess.  Does this have relevence to our discussion topic?

Just showing another example of how the salmon cages are a variety store for diseases, waiting to kill the wild salmon.   :(
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aquapaloosa

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #271 on: December 07, 2011, 07:14:15 PM »

Quote
Just showing another example of how the salmon cages are a variety store for diseases, waiting to kill the wild salmon.   

While salmon farms do concentrate  fish populations  in locations, to state that Farms are a primary  vector for disease transfer etc, in the ocean is quite miss leading. If the farms were not there, any disease present  will be transferred quite adequately from natural populations of herring, pilchards, salmon, sticklebacks, rock fish, octi, starfish...the list goes on and on.  Please go on google earth and see for yourselves the size of the farms in comparison to the surrounding area.  I think you will be surprised to see that it is very little.  While the google earth photos do not show area's with high densities of herring if it did, at times, I am sure it would show massive areas of coverage in comparison.  There is just to much life and current to say the salmon farms accelerate disease my any measurable amount. IMO

Quote
Well thanks Chris, I guess.  Does this have relevence to our discussion topic?

It does break up the discussion quit a bit.  It is quite distracting.  Heck,  why not squeeze in 10hours of reading here and there to break up the conversation and distract from the issue the thread is about.  He does seem to have his own "news" threads some times but I notice the his posting traffic is shifty and I think he should just stick to his "more news" threads instead of interrupting things here.  It doesn't happen on other threads why does it happen here?  I would like to hear more from him but he seems to be hidden behind all his headlines somewhere.  Doing what he does I guess.
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chris gadsden

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #272 on: December 07, 2011, 09:42:05 PM »

While salmon farms do concentrate  fish populations  in locations, to state that Farms are a primary  vector for disease transfer etc, in the ocean is quite miss leading. If the farms were not there, any disease present  will be transferred quite adequately from natural populations of herring, pilchards, salmon, sticklebacks, rock fish, octi, starfish...the list goes on and on.  Please go on google earth and see for yourselves the size of the farms in comparison to the surrounding area.  I think you will be surprised to see that it is very little.  While the google earth photos do not show area's with high densities of herring if it did, at times, I am sure it would show massive areas of coverage in comparison.  There is just to much life and current to say the salmon farms accelerate disease my any measurable amount. IMO

It does break up the discussion quit a bit.  It is quite distracting.  Heck,  why not squeeze in 10hours of reading here and there to break up the conversation and distract from the issue the thread is about.  He does seem to have his own "news" threads some times but I notice the his posting traffic is shifty and I think he should just stick to his "more news" threads instead of interrupting things here.  It doesn't happen on other threads why does it happen here?  I would like to hear more from him but he seems to be hidden behind all his headlines somewhere.  Doing what he does I guess.
This should make you happy, 10 hours more to read and pick apart. ;D ;D ;D

http://alexandramorton.typepad.com/alexandra_morton/

absolon

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #273 on: December 07, 2011, 10:26:29 PM »

LOL. It sure doesn't take ten hours to get through and pick apart Morton's mutterings.

It's funny she doesn't mention the most recent events at the Inquiry where her good friend Justice Cohen has banned her from possessing any of the documents supplied as exhibits and prohibited her from even viewing them except in the presence of a lawyer. It appears he has decided she can't be trusted after she and her pal, "Activist for hire" Don Staniford, released documents to the NewYork Times in violation of her oath of confidentiality.

Here's some great shots of the dynamic duo at work, saving the world from fish farms.

http://www.farmfreshsalmon.org/blog/anti-fish-farming-activist-alexandra-morton-and-protestor-hire-don-staniford-campbell-river

Note that world class sampling technique. Just like a real scientist.
« Last Edit: December 07, 2011, 10:59:12 PM by absolon »
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aquapaloosa

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #274 on: December 07, 2011, 11:02:03 PM »

Not much for me to pick apart.  I will leave that to real biologists.  She is only a anti- salmon farmer campaigning under the flag of saving wild salmon.  I think it would be cool if she would dress up more often like here dedicated Scottish sidekick Stanford in a super hero suit and/or condom out fit.  Would seem more appropriate to me.

Here is one full of fear mongering and false info with the cool outfits.  But where is Morton??  She NEVER dresses up and I think she should.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gSL8fUb8OIY&feature=related  

« Last Edit: December 07, 2011, 11:04:42 PM by aquapaloosa »
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Dave

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #275 on: December 08, 2011, 01:22:54 PM »

Perhaps some salmonid ID courses would help a bit too.  About 3/4 way through there is a fish photo with a #11 tag on it that is identified as a coho.  Having seen thousands and sampled hundreds of Weaver Creek and Harrison River sockeye, that's what I'm calling it.  Now just seeing the head isn't quite enough for me to bet the farm but I would wager a bottle of Scotch that fish is not a coho.
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chris gadsden

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #276 on: December 08, 2011, 04:22:15 PM »

More, please find enclosed a press update including:                    

 

"Debating Genetically Modified Salmon" (Science Friday, 9th December): http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/201112095

 

"Tribute to the movement to protect wild salmon from farm salmon" (Alexandra Morton, 8th December): http://alexandramorton.typepad.com/alexandra_morton/2011/12/tribute-to-the-movement-to-protect-wild-salmon-from-farm-salmon.html

 

"Environmental Claims For Farmed Fish Don't Hold Up To Scrutiny" (NPR, 8th December): http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2011/12/08/143304753/environmental-claims-for-farmed-fish-dont-hold-up-to-scrutiny

 

"Cohen Commission is delaying progress for aquaculture: DFO" (FIS, 8th December): http://www.fis.com/fis/worldnews/worldnews.asp?monthyear=&day=8&id=48302&l=e&special=&ndb=1%20target=

 

"Eco-labelled farmed fish not much better than regular farmed: report" (FIS, 8th December): http://www.fis.com/fis/worldnews/worldnews.asp?monthyear=&day=8&id=48295&l=e&special=&ndb=1%20target=

 

"What we know about ISA virus in British Columbia" (Alexandra Morton, 7th December): http://alexandramorton.typepad.com/alexandra_morton/2011/12/what-we-know-about-isa-virus-in-british-columbia.html

 

"Alexandra Morton and Dale Kelley talk about ISA in British Columbia" (Coop, 7th December): http://www.coopradio.org/station/archives/35

 

""DFO says Cohen Commission to blame for delay”… nothing like half-facts to assist in denial… One more disconnection notice for DFO and salmon farmers" (The Salmon Guy, 7th December): http://www.salmonguy.org/?p=4637

 

"Supply of sustainably-farmed salmon fails to meet demand" (iPolitics, 7th December): http://www.ipolitics.ca/2011/12/07/supply-of-sustainably-farmed-salmon-fails-to-meet-demand/  

 

"Study finds something fishy about eco-labels on seafood" (Canoe, 7th December): http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Environment/2011/12/07/19089101.html

 

"Costa Rica halts tuna farm in Golfo Dulce" (Surfer Today, 7th December): http://www.surfertoday.com/environment/6534-costa-rica-halts-tuna-farm-in-golfo-dulce

 

"Aquaculture: How green is your farmed fish?" (Earth Times, 7th December): http://www.earthtimes.org/going-green/how-green-farmed-fish/1689/

 

"Report questions quality of farmed fish eco-labels: Most eco-labeled farmed fish are no more than a 10% improvement over non-labeled counterpart, Pew-backed report shows" (Intrafish, 7th December): www.intrafish.com

 

"New report ranks farmed finfish eco-labels" (Seafood Source, 7th December): http://www.seafoodsource.com/newsarticledetail.aspx?id=13212

 

 

Including from The Salmon Guy:

 

"Maybe time for another disconnection notice for salmon farmers and DFO…?"

 

From Alexandra Morton:

 

"I am not allowed to comment at the moment about the DFO paper reported widely in the media. I have written this posting because the government of Canada has not included crucial information regarding fresh, high-quality samples from the Fraser River that have tested positive in recent weeks..... There is history of political and industry resistance to positive ISAv diagnosis in new regions. The BCMAL minister’s comments that he reported BC’s ISAv-free status to China seems premature and an indication that this is a serious trade barrier issue. But we have to ask – why wouldn’t we want to know if ISAv is here?"

 
« Last Edit: December 08, 2011, 04:27:38 PM by chris gadsden »
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StillAqua

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #277 on: December 09, 2011, 09:19:43 AM »

It's funny she doesn't mention the most recent events at the Inquiry where her good friend Justice Cohen has banned her from possessing any of the documents supplied as exhibits and prohibited her from even viewing them except in the presence of a lawyer. It appears he has decided she can't be trusted after she and her pal, "Activist for hire" Don Staniford, released documents to the NewYork Times in violation of her oath of confidentiality.
Just read Justice Cohen's ruling on that issue. Wow, Morton and Staniford set a new low. There's no justification for that kind of contempt and arrogance....absolutely none.
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alwaysfishn

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #278 on: December 09, 2011, 08:24:31 PM »

Just read Justice Cohen's ruling on that issue. Wow, Morton and Staniford set a new low. There's no justification for that kind of contempt and arrogance....absolutely none.

The real contempt and arrogance seems to be coming from DFO withholding information on the ISA virus......
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chris gadsden

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #279 on: December 11, 2011, 08:31:19 AM »

Disagreement over salmon virus in Canada
Activist scientist finds virus in fish, Canadian government does not Posted: December 11, 2011 - 12:19am
Disagreement over salmon virus in Canada
JUNEAU EMPIRE
An independent British Columbia researcher is accusing the Canadian government of covering up years of positive tests for the potentially deadly Infectious Salmon Anemia virus.

“Fish disease has become a federal secret in Canada,” fish researcher Dr. Alexandra Morton said. “I believe it is because it is everywhere and no one wants to admit it.”

Canadian officials have refuted Morton’s claims.

In a letter to Fisheries and Oceans Canada Minister Keith Ashfield, Morton said the Canadian government’s lack of action has failed its constituency.

“This has unacceptable biological, economic, international and market implications,” Morton said. “So we have stepped into the void you created. We will form a plan when all our results are in and we will give you direction in the New Year. Salmon diseases are no longer a federal secret. We will protect our fish. We are not going to beg help from you any longer.”

Dr. Gary Marty with the Canada Food Inspection Agency, the researcher who did the most recent ISAv test for the Canadian government, said Morton is not qualified to make the interpretations she does.

“She does not have advanced training in medicine or pathology,” he said. However, Marty said, he does have respect for “her powers of observation.”

“When she records something, I can use that, and helps me understand what is going on,” he said.

 

Activist scientist sounds the alarm

Morton is a researcher with the Raincoast Research Society. In her decades-long career as an activist scientist she has studied algal blooms and sea lice in BC waters and fought to end fish farms’ use of acoustic deterrence on sea mammals, including orca whales. Simon Fraser University awarded Morton and honorary doctorate of science.

Her 10-year-long study of sea lice, she said, prepared her for the ISAv fight. She said at first the Canadian government denied the sea lice problem. “Now it is very clear,” she said. So when she hears the government’s current denials of ISAv she said she believes she is seeing the same thing.

Recently Morton traveled to BC’s Fraser River, the site of a massive salmon collapse in 2009, to collect salmon samples to test for the virus. (The recent ISA scare prompted a commission looking into the Fraser River salmon collapse to reopen its investigation for three days in December to look into the possible role the virus may have had in the collapse. Find out more at www.cohencommission .ca)

Fraser River is located 600 kilometers south of River’s Inlet, the site where researchers found two sockeye salmon smolt in October that were suspected to carry the virus and possibly exhibiting signs of the disease.

Morton collected 10 salmon at Fraser River that had died before spawning. She sent the fresh samples to independent labs for testing.

“We found [the virus] in the heart of one of the coho and in the gills of a 25 pound king salmon,” Morton said. “This salmon was yellow.” She said she also found the virus in the gills of a chum salmon, and later in a sockeye.

“So far I’ve only got a positive test in salmon that have died before spawning, so you can’t call them healthy fish,” Morton said.

Morton sent her samples to independent testing facilities in Prince Edward Island, Canada, and Oslo, Norway. “I picked these labs because they are good at what they do,” Morton said. She said the scientists who tested her samples have received push back since releasing the results.

Morton said the Canadian government won’t acknowledge the results from the test she commissioned. Her explanation is not flattering to Canada’s leaders.

Morton said conflicting commercial interests may make the Canadian government hesitant to address the situation openly.

In Canada wild salmon are “in the way” of hydroelectric dams, resource development and fish farms, she said. Therefore, Morton said, she doesn’t think the government has much reason or impetus to respond. “Really, Canadian fish are dying due to a lack of political will,” she said.

 

Previous test by a post-graduate student researcher wasn’t published

This is not the first time a researcher has found the virus in Canada’s salmon. A post-graduate student named Molly Kibenge studied hundreds of salmon for the virus in 2004. Her results found 115 positive results for the virus in Pacific salmon out of a sample size of 460. The virus was found in 36 out of 116 chinook salmon tested, 15 out of 88 pink salmon and 64 out of 103 sockeye salmon. The test has been called into question because all 64 of the sockeye that tested positive came from the same location. The virus was also found in one Atlantic salmon out of a sample size of two.

Kibenge’s finding were initially not published.

However, with the recent possible instance of the virus, Kibenge asked Canadian officials to publish her original findings.

Her request was turned down due to ongoing tests and an ongoing inquiry into the Fraser River salmon collapse called the Cohen Commission, according to Dr. Simon Jones, Aquatic Animal Health Station.

“I will wait to hear the outcome of these processes before further discussion on a 7-year-old manuscript, Jones said.

Some of Kibenge’s results have been confirmed by the Atlantic Veterinarian College, according to Morton.

The most recent flare-up of public interest into the virus stated in October of this year when the virus may have been detected in two juvenile sockeye salmon north of Vancouver Island at Rivers Inlet which empties into Queen Charlotte Sound.

Several species of salmon and trout can carry the deadly virus without showing symptoms, according to a report by Iowa State’s Center for Food Security and Public Health.

Infected fish are highly contagious, whether wild of farmed, and can transmit the disease to and between Atlantic salmon with devastating effects. The disease, also known as hemorrhagic kidney syndrome, can be difficult to detect in fish farms and can cause nearly 100 percent mortality. There is no treatment.

Although Pacific salmon may carry the virus without mortal effects, it is possible for a virus to undergo deadly mutations. The report’s authors compared this to outbreaks of highly virulent strains of avian influenza. ISA virus does not transmit to humans.

The 48 salmon smolt tested did not show signs of disease, said Dr. Ted Meyers, Chief Pathologist for Alaska Department of Fish and Game in an earlier interview. They were collected for routine stomach analysis, he said. The test for infectious salmon anemia was secondary. “We are concerned and we want to see further testing, but it is an Atlantic virus and Pacific salmon are resistant to this virus. So it is not time to panic,” Meyers said.

Since that interview the Canadian government has conducted further tests. Researchers at the Canada Food Inspection Agency reported they did not find any sign of ISA virus in these tests.

“The virus is widely reported in Atlantic salmon stocks in Norway, so there is no reason it would not have come into BC in the tens of millions of eggs imported, Morton said. Unless we are very smart about this, use everything known and act wisely, we will pay the price,” she said.

Both Morton and Canadian officials are bewildered by the others’ findings.

The Canada Food Inspection Agency has not had a single positive test for the virus in over 7,000 tests in the last decade including 1,600 in 2011, much of which came in the last couple months.

“Yet,” Morton said “I’m finding it all over the place.”

Morton believes the lack of government findings is due to the testing procedure it uses. “If it mutates a little you won’t be able to detect the virus,” she said.

chris gadsden

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #280 on: December 11, 2011, 08:33:44 AM »

Continued



Canadian government finds no virus

Marty, the Canada Food Inspection Agency researcher, said Morton’s claims are off base. He uses as an example Morton’s claim that the 2,000 “classic ISAv” lesions — Marty says it is closer to 1,300 — found in Department of Fish and Oceans routine salmon testing are proof of government incompetence.

He compared Morton’s attribution of the lesions to ISAv to blaming a dry cough on Avian influenza.

“Just because these fish have a common symptom doesn’t mean they have an uncommon, in the Pacific, disease,” Marty said. “What is a very mild change Morton attributes to a severe disease brought on by this virus.”

However, Marty said the finding should not be dismissed. “Some of those are real lesions, something is happening here,” he said.

 

Is it ISAv?

“If [World Organization for Animal Health] can detect it, we should be able to detect it,” Marty said.

Marty also said it is too early to announce the World Organization for Animal Health’s finding.

“What we have is some positive PCR tests,” Marty said. “It’s easy to get a false positive.”

Researchers use the polymerase chain reaction test to detect viruses like ISAv. It is the test Marty used to produce his negative ISAv results. However, Marty said the tests detects “only a very small segment of the entire virus genome — they do not detect the entire genome.”

Therefore a second procedure is needed to sequence a complete genome to determine if the “piece of (genetic material) detected by the test really is the virus as opposed to some other material that also contains the same small piece of (genetic material).

Marty warns that PCR tests are highly sensitive and contamination might occur.

“When I see PCR positive results for a disease not known to be in BC, in a species not known to be susceptible to the disease, and the fish had no clinical signs (or “classic lesions”) of the disease, I suspect that the PCR results are false positives until proven otherwise,” he said.

Marty said researchers need to be cautious with reacting to preliminary findings. There is no cure for salmon anemia and decimation is only option to stop the spread of the disease in Canada’s farmed Atlantic salmon population.

“Some of these farms have millions of stock,” Marty said. “You’d pretty much have to cull them all.”

Fish farmers have learned to live with the virus in recent years.

“When you have well-managed fish populations even when they get really highly virulent forms of ISA it doesn’t‚ result in much mortality.” ISA is kind of like a flu virus and behaves very much like that.

Chile’s production is going back up to its pre-breakout production of Atlantic salmon, Marty said. Norway and Chile control ISA through vaccination.

 

High costs from Chilean outbreak

“Maine spent $8 million unsuccessfully trying to get rid of it. Chile lost $2 billion to ISA virus, recently, some industry insiders say, because they did not act fast enough,” Morton said.

“When I read about Chile I feel like we are marching down the road again.”

In the beginning, they said things like, “Looks like ISA, but we can’t get it in all the tests, and it looks different than Norway.” Nobody was prepared for how fast it spread.”

Morton recommends Alaska test its major rivers and hatcheries for ISAv and put pressure on the Canadian government.

Alaska has an advantage in the ISA fight due to its concerned D.C. Delegation, Morton said.

“Let’s check the hatcheries, let’s check the fish farms, let’s find out what this thing really is and what is going on.”

“I know Alaska a doesn’t want to be an ISA zone,” Morton said. “But it can not ignore it.”

“It’s containable if you catch it before it becomes virulent. If it mutates and starts killing salmon all we can do is sit back and watch it rip through the population,” Morton said. “If we don’t do everything we can, then we deserve what we get.

Dave

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #281 on: December 11, 2011, 04:48:13 PM »

yawn ::)
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chris gadsden

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #282 on: December 11, 2011, 05:16:24 PM »

yawn ::)
Better stop reading these Dave and go fishing. ;D ;D ;D

Dave

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #283 on: December 11, 2011, 08:00:01 PM »

I'm thinking you're right Chris ;)  See you out there.
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chris gadsden

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Re: Lethal virus from European salmon found in wild BC salmon
« Reply #284 on: December 12, 2011, 11:46:39 AM »

Hope to see Dave and others join the march here in Chilliwack on Thursday. ;D ;D ;D


Please find enclosed a press update including:

 

"Day of Action for Wild Salmon: Dec 14th" (Wilderness Committee, 14th December): http://www.wildernesscommittee.org/victoria/sven/day_action_wild_salmon_dec_14th

 

"Wild Salmon Rally" (Friends of Clayoquot Sound, 13th December): http://hosted.verticalresponse.com/717441/2cc816e692/281512073/69923beea6/

 

"Action Week for Wild Salmon!" (Salmon Are Sacred, 12th December): http://www.salmonaresacred.org/blog/action-week-wild-salmon

 

"Wild Game Fish Conservation International Stresses Importance of healthy wild Pacific salmon" (Wild Game Fish Conservation International, 12th December): http://wgfci.blogspot.com/

 

"Stop Plover Point salmon feedlot" (Friends of Clayoquot Sound, 12th December): http://hosted.verticalresponse.com/717441/e9710d2548/281512073/3e8794167b/

 

"BIOTECH:  Enviro risks of modified salmon leap into spotlight" (E&E News, 12th December): http://www.eenews.net/EEDaily/2011/12/12/7

 

"Disagreement over salmon virus in Canada: Activist scientist finds virus in fish, Canadian government does not" (Juneau Empire, 11th December): http://juneauempire.com/state/2011-12-11/disagreement-over-salmon-virus-canada

 

"Open Letter to Minister Ashfield" (Alexandra Morton, 9th December): http://alexandramorton.typepad.com/alexandra_morton/2011/12/open-lett.html

 

"Tensions mounting over truth behind salmon virus controversy" (Cordova Times, 9th December): http://thecordovatimes.com/article/1149tensions_mounting_over_truth_behind_salmon

 

"Q&A on ISA, what we know about ISA in British Columbia" (BC Salmon Farmers Association, 9th December): http://www.salmonfarmers.org/media-releases

 

"Salmon escapes suspected at Marine Harvest, SalMar: More than 100,000 fish could have escaped recently due to the 'Berit' storm that hit Norwegian coast" (Intrafish, 9th December): www.intrafish.com

 

"Debating Genetically Modified Salmon" (NPR, 9th December): http://www.npr.org/2011/12/09/143453487/debating-genetically-modified-salmon

 

"Key documents: Organic seafood does not include farmed Atlantic salmon" (Fish Farm News & Science, 9th December): http://fishfarmnews.blogspot.com/2011/12/key-documents-organic-seafood-does-not.html

 

"Salmon virus scare spreads fear and doubt" (Alberni Valley Times, 9th December): http://www2.canada.com/albernivalleytimes/news/story.html?id=c3591fe5-c962-476e-9a18-74fcc7ce67e9

 

"Tribute to the Wild Salmon People" (Salmon Are Sacred, 8th December): http://www.salmonaresacred.org/blog/tribute-wild-salmon-people

 

"Salmon sector recovery causes optimism among suppliers" (FIS, 8th December): http://www.fis.com/fis/worldnews/worldnews.asp?monthyear=&day=8&id=48294&l=e&special=&ndb=1%20target=

 

"Managing for Uncertainty: Pathogens and Diseases in Pacific Salmon" (Simon Fraser University, 7th December): www.sfu.ca/cstudies/science/salmon.php

 

"Norwegian fish better than the EU believed: Norwegian fish contain less inorganic arsenic than the EU thought" (NIFES, 7th December): http://www.nifes.no/index.php?page_id=&article_id=3851&lang_id=2

 

"M&S refute eco-label study" (World Fishing & Aquaculture, 7th December): http://www.worldfishing.net/news101/m-and-s-refute-eco-label-study

 

"BC Salmon" (House of Commons, 5th December): http://www.jameslunneymp.ca/speeches_detail.php?recordID=1052

 

 

Including from Alexandra Morton in an open letter to the Canadian Fisheries Minister, Keith Ashfield:

 

"Mr. Ashfield I keep trying to tell you, we are not fools. Your failure to respond to the early virus warnings echoes what happened to Chile. This has unacceptable biological, economic, international and market implications."

 

From Alexandra Morton quoted in The Juneau Empire:

 

"Fish disease has become a federal secret in Canada.  I believe it is because it is everywhere and no one wants to admit it."

 

From Dr. Gary Marty quoted in The Juneau Empire:

 

"Some of these farms have millions of stock. You’d pretty much have to cull them all."

From from Friends of Clayoquot Sound:

 

"It is time for us to step up and demand that DFO deal with the ISA virus crisis and not approve Plover Point before Justice Cohen has tabled his recommendations next June."

 

And from Wild Game Fish Conservation International:

 

"WGFCI is attending two days of the three-day Cohen Commission special Infectious Salmon Anemia virus (ISAv) hearings in order to impress upon Justice Cohen and Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans the international importance of robust populations of healthy wild Pacific salmon."
« Last Edit: December 12, 2011, 12:49:35 PM by chris gadsden »
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