Interesting that Dr. Miller's name comes up in Twyla's latest propaganda. Does she know that the Pacific Biological Station was one of the labs used by the CFIA in their latest virus update? Yeah, that's right....This is one of Ms Morton's superlabs:
http://www.inspection.gc.ca/animals/aquatic-animals/diseases/reportable/isa/wild-anadromous-salmonids/eng/1370960326837/1370960742286Twyla also fails to mention every thing Dr. Miller said about her retroactive testing for ISAv in her preserved samples. For more accurate information go here:
http://www.cohencommission.ca/en/pdf/FinalReport/CohenCommissionFinalReport_Vol01_09.pdf#zoom=100http://www.cohencommission.ca/en/pdf/FinalReport/CohenCommissionFinalReport_Vol02_04.pdf#zoom=100http://www.cohencommission.ca/en/pdf/FinalReport/CohenCommissionFinalReport_Vol02_05.pdf#zoom=100She also leaves out most of what Dr. Nylund said and even Dr. Kibenge. What Dr. Miller believes is that the sequences she found could have been here for a long time - even before salmon farming. I guess it was that professional editing that left that bit out. You know - the editing that preserves the integrity of the testimony...lol.
Oh those Chinook from Creative Salmon. Funny how Twyla leaves out the part that the prevalence of the ISAv-like sequences found were the same in healthy and unhealthy Chinook Salmon. Dr. Miller's ISAV results from those Chinook salmon were linked to data from a licenced veterinarian that sampled the fish and a board-certified veterinary pathologist that examined sections of the organs under the microscope. In this way, it was obvious that the sick fish were very sick and the healthy fish were very healthy, but the prevalence of ISAV was the same in both groups. This means that whatever Dr. Miller was finding, it was not the cause of the disease in the farmed Chinook salmon.
Funny how Twyla fails to say everything about 2004 draft paper by Dr. Molly Kibenge. To read more about it go here:
http://www.cohencommission.ca/en/pdf/FinalReport/CohenCommissionFinalReport_Vol01_09.pdf#zoom=100http://www.cohencommission.ca/en/pdf/FinalReport/CohenCommissionFinalReport_Vol01_11.pdf#zoom=100http://salmonconfidential.com/2013/04/17/the-character-assassination-of-simon-jones/To further investigate what was going on with Molly’s results, 20 blind samples (10 negative and 10 positive) were sent to Dr. Fred Kibenge at the AVC for retesting. Six of those samples came up positive, but 3 of these samples originally tested negative. Funny how Twyla failed to mention that tid-bit. Isn't movie making fun, eh?
If you use a PCR test that only reports an exact match as a “positive” you could easily miss the virus, since even a slight change will make it “invisible” to a probe that is looking for an exact sequence. Kibenge's lab was using a technique that was reading the sequences of the virus, rather than just using a probe that only reports an exact match of a very specific sequence. This is how Kibenge was able to pick up on viral sequences that contained slight variations of the virus, as well as fragments.
Apparently, Ms Morton is finding positive ISAv results that no one else in Canada and the US are finding. According to Morton, the tests that the CFIA and the WDFW used have never worked on wild salmon, but is she inferring that the testing she has access to does work on wild salmon? From the Cohen Commission, we heard testimony from Dr. Kilbenge that the current tests for ISAv have been developed for Atlantic Salmon (Volume 1; Chapter 9, page 455). According to Kibenge, we don’t know the best tissue to take from Pacific Salmon to find most of the virus – unlike with Atlantic Salmon where scientists have a very good idea which tissues to sample. So if Morton’s “go-to-lab” is saying this then what unique test has she found that is finding all these positive samples? Interestingly enough, one of the labs used by the CFIA in their latest virus surveillance report was one of Morton’s “super labs” – the Pacific Biological Station which is the workplace of Dr. Kristi Miller.
As for ISA 101, it is best to get the information from a more trusted source. Try here:
http://www.cohencommission.ca/en/pdf/FinalReport/CohenCommissionFinalReport_Vol01_09.pdf#zoom=100When Morton inquired to the CFIA about the status of those samples, she received a series of varying replies ranging from they were going to use up the whole sample in testing, so they would never be returned; to they weren’t going to test any of her samples because she didn’t have chain of custody.
Yeah, that's what happens when you don't know what you are doing. Couldn't see that coming...lol.
The CFIA claims they won’t test Morton positive samples because they say they don’t know where they came from. However, using DNA testing they could in fact confirm where the salmon originated.
Successful DNA testing depends on the quality of the sample taken. Microbiology sampling can be easily contaminated - even by the pros (who told me). Even then it is not a perfect science with fish when you see issues with stock identification. Oh that's right...your a film producer, Twyla.....not a biologist. Perhaps, in the sequel to Salmonconfidential, Twyla (or Jean from Shaw TV) can play a film producer that is actually dedicated to the integrity of the subject she is portraying.
It is perplexing as to why they would not sample sick, farmed Atlantic (European) salmon, the likely source of the European virus in question. If you were really looking for the virus, it would be the obvious place to start.
Farmed fish (recently dead) have been routinely sampled by the province. One of the tests is for ISAv. For more on this read Dr. Gary Marty's rebuttal to Ms Morton's misinterpretations on ISAv:
https://www.professionalbiology.com/sites/default/files/bionews/BioNews22-1-electronic.pdfMost research on fish diseases have been directed towards farmed and hatchery fish - not wild fish.
http://www.cohencommission.ca/en/pdf/TR/Project1-Report.pdf#zoom=100The CFIA is the agency responsible for stripping Kibenge’s lab.
False.
http://www.seafoodintelligence.com/EditModule.aspx?tabid=286&mid=767&def=News%20Article%20View&ItemId=34071http://www.inspection.gc.ca/animals/aquatic-animals/diseases/reportable/isa/statement-2013-07-05/eng/1373038790217/1373041710849