Once again, like the Omega-3 or PCB thing, you have no idea what you are talking about, AF.
Take some time to reread what I posted. The fact is I am quoting "non-feedlot" experts. Perhaps the problem you have with what I posted is that it has not been filtered through the pro-feedlot media experts.
IHN has always been in the wild fish for crying out loud.
There you go again with the "it's the fault of the wild fish" argument. At the risk of repeating myself:
Suggesting that because it's always been there in the wild fish and then implying it's the fault of the wild fish is just a ridiculous argument. If the feedlots weren't there we wouldn't even be talking about the problem..... In the wild it's dealt with under the survival of the fittest law. Sick fish or dead fish quickly get eliminated by something higher in the food chain.
The problem with the feedlots is that they become a concentrated cesspool for the virus and just by the shear concentration have the potential of escalating the problem for the wild fish. I could care less if all of the Atlantics die from it, I care of the effect 100's of contaminated feedlots will have on the wild salmon. And then there is the risk of the virus mutating.... which is a problem that can't even be defined.You then go off and speculate some more by saying that salmon farms become a concentrated cesspool for the virus and undoubtedly have the potential of spreading the IHN virus to wild salmon.
Insert your own adjectives here instead of "cesspool". The fact is you have 1000's of Atlantics milling around in a limited space spewing out this virus and whatever else, which is infecting potentially every living creature swimming by. This is just another consequence of "farming" in an ocean environment. There is no separation from the surrounding environment and no containment of the cesspool.
You are starting to sound like Annie and Absolon. When you don't have an answer, you try to discredit the poster. While it may make you feel good about your own position, it adds no information to the topic.