" Explain where this is mentioned in the Suzuki commissioned report as one of the cumulative impacts mentioned?"
Its not and I am not the one mentioning the report , its you, to me that report is very vague in facts.
I get my info from other sources.You seem to mention the reports that have little to no backup with data .
Here are 2 .
http://www.artsandopinion.com/2005_v4_n2/slice.htm
I mentioned this one before .
https://www.watershed-watch.org/2012/11/nine-year-study-confirms-sea-lice-outbreaks-on-farms-cause-wild-salmon-declines%e2%80%94better-farm-management-a-short-term-solution/
Yes, I did mention the Suzuki commissioned report because up to this point you have not answered my question on where you are getting your information from. I keep asking but you keep dodging. I brought up the Suzuki report (a report commissioned by an environmental non-governmental organization that openly opposes open net pen aquaculture) to see if you could find where antibiotics and chemicals are brought up in that report as one of those cumulative impacts. It may appear “vague” because the authors at that time believed there were multiple factors involved and that there was no direct evidence that available to suggest what particular factor caused the reduced survival of the 2000 brood in that area of the Broughton. From that standpoint, the authors are not that far off because if you had read Cohen (Remember that report I use with little to no backup with data…lol? The one with testimony from Dr. Randall Peterman…That guy with no data to backup his claims either?) you would have noticed that he didn’t conclude that sea lice, on a different front, were the main cause of Fraser Sockeye declines. I suggest that your opinion of the Suzuki report soured when it did not fully implicated salmon farms, so then it became “vague” and not worth mentioning anymore. First time I heard someone on this board that opposes fish farms disagree with a report commissioned by a group that opposes fish farms.
Unfortunately, “Arts & Opinion” is an opinion piece – not a scientific study. In fact, that website (dated 2005) contains no scientific references for the information it uses. It also talks about salmon farms in Maine which is a different regulatory environment. Cypermethrin is not even used on BC fish farms to my knowledge. It provides no context about the use of SLICE in BC such as frequency, conditions it is applied, or other management strategies. However, considering this is opinion piece is from 2005 I am not surprised that it is not current with what is going on today with fish husbandry. Antibiotic use on BC fish farms has decreased by more than half since 2005. It is actually 50 to 5 grams per tonne nowadays. It also provides no context about the frequency and what conditions antibiotics are used. Most of the feed provided to BC farmed fish contain no antibiotics. So much for this source of information.
The use of in-feed antibacterials in BC salmon aquaculture (1995 to 2012)
http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/aquaculture/reporting-rapports/health-sante-eng.htmlThe study from Watershed Watch Salmon Society website you provided was the kind of example of a scientific study I was looking for. It is actually fairly similar to a particular study (with data to back it up) produced by the collaboration of scientists that are involved with BAMP:
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0060096The authors in the above study (note who the authors are) suggest that:
Adapting the management of parasites on farmed salmon according to migrations of wild salmon may therefore provide a precautionary approach to conserving wild salmon populations in salmon farming regions.Wow, people from different perspectives and backgrounds working together to put science first. Note the similar authors from the study you provided.
Here is another study (with data to back it up) that has come out at the same time (see below). Salmon farms may harm wild salmon, but it is not certain according to the authors because of other considerations mentioned in the study. They recommend that salmon farmers and fish managers continue to be proactive in what they are doing now which includes fallowing of sites. You may be interested to read near the end what the authors have to say about SLICE.
https://salmonfarmscience.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/sealice_2012_phil-trans-r-soc-b-2012-brauner-1770-9.pdfhttp://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/367/1596/1770.full (same study but in a different format)