Your comments are scary.... As a fish farmer, is that the standard you find acceptable in the fish you produce? Do you measure the quality of your fish by the number of people that get ill from them? Would you actually eat one of those fish yourself??
Is the public that unaware of what they should be looking for in a fresh fish?
Your comments are scary. You are passing along another unsubstantiated Morton opinion where we do not even know if these fish came from BC or not. Morton has no clue about fish pathology, but you trust her assessment of the brains of these fish. She figures she can dissect the heads of these fish and know what is going on or what is not normal and you buy into it. I agree that the fish gills do show that the fish may be “off”, but Morton implying that they are diseased is a bit of stretch. A person needs to do more follow-up work then just taking a photo and making an educated (or uneducated in Morton’s case) guess. I would trust guys like Dave that use to deal with sort of stuff and stop listening to pretend scientists like Morton. It is clear that Morton has given up on science to back up her arguments and has instead resorted to attacking the marketability of BC farmed salmon. This is an easier approach because it involves very little evidence, just a little use of perception and the use of colour photos of fish. This will likely be a much for successful approach because playing to people’s fears about what they eat is very easy nowadays.
Easywater…Where did that photo come from? Is it a farmed fish? What species of fish? Was it a male or a female? Was it a prespawn? Was it a recently recovered carcass or been dead for awhile. You just can’t show a picture like that without some background to attach to it for some context. For instance, for your information Pacific Salmon eventually die after spawning. The longer they are in freshwater (especially if the temperatures are warm) the greater the effects of pathogens on things like the gills. They are not maintaining their bodies like they were when they were in the ocean. Energy goes into migrating to the spawning grounds and spawning. Just because you have fungus on the gills does not necessarily mean that fish farms are to blame. Issue like prespawn mortality are alarming and should be taken seriously, but people need to stop necessarily blaming salmon farms for this. As we found in the Cohen Inquiry there is much more we need to know about this problem.
The fish in the picture looks a lot like the Sockeye from Harrison Mills that Morton has on YouTube (I agree with Absolon). You should understand that Harrison Sockeye have a protracted migration into freshwater where they stay in the Harrison Lake for a period of time before dropping back downstream, spawning in November and December. Secondly, you don’ t just simply pick up a salmon carcass and determine it has some sort of deadly disease by getting your 2 dollar dissection kit out and your Walmart cutting board. If this is a Morton sampled fish I would be sceptical of any results from it. Fortunately, there are dedicated, competent people from the DFO that sample spawning salmon on the spawning grounds. They actually know how to properly sample salmon carcasses and preserve tissue samples while “fly by your seat” Morton and her merry band of donkeys (i.e. Staniford) have no clue at all what they are doing.
As Bassonator says: Typical Morton….nuff said.