Misinterpretation #1:
Where is IHN most prevalent? What lifestage is most vulnerable? How large are Sockeye generally once they enter saltwater? Is IHN a naturally occurring virus in wild Pacific Salmon – like Sockeye? We have already covered this a million times, but you chose to quote something from the CFIA site and make it seem like young salmon are at great risk IHN outbreaks from salmon farms. However, you still refuse to back up your claims. Lastly, you also left out some other items from that site which provides some context around that bolded text you chose. If you are going to interpret do it properly. Good spin job!
The more you post, the more obvious it becomes that you don't understand much about wild salmon. But why would you? The wild salmon are the one thing that is slowing the expansion of these diseased cesspools.
If you did a little research on the sockeye salmons life cycle you would know that a sockeye hatches in a river upstream of a fresh water lake. Once hatched it will spend a year of it's life in the fresh water lake. When the infected adult sockeye return and swim through that lake they drop the virus, infecting the young sockeye fry. IHN can survive in fresh water for up to seven weeks. Even while the adult sockeye are spawning and after they die they are releasing the IHN virus and the stream flow is carrying the virus down into the lake, where the sockeye fry are waiting to eat the decomposing particles. The sockeye fry have no chance of survival.
Of course wild salmon are natural carries of the disease. However they are not all infected...... until they swim past one of the infected feedlot cesspools. That's why we hear the spin as to how fast the feedlot was cleaned up. The feedlot salmon are already destined to die, however the industry knows these cesspools are major killers of wild salmon and that is the reason they are required to be cleaned up so quickly.
Unfortunately there are a couple of problems, first the IHN infected salmon don't usually show any physical symptoms of the disease. Second the feedlots for whatever reason don't do regular sampling and if they do the lab results can take weeks before they are completed. For weeks and likely months, the feedlots are spewing the virus infecting every wild salmon passing by.
The worst part of the last outbreak of IHN is.......... it's happened in the middle of the wild salmon migration.