Aquaculture for all

Lethal Atlantic Virus Found In Pacific Salmon

Salmonids Health Biosecurity +7 more

CANADA - The highly contagious marine influenza virus, Infectious Salmon Anaemia (ISA) has for the first time been officially reported after being found in the Pacific on B.C.s central coast, according to Simon Fraser University reseacrhers.

Now it threatens both wild salmon and herring, say biologist Alexandra Morton and Simon Fraser University professor Rick Routledge, whose laboratory led to the discovery of ISA in B.C. salmon smolts.

Dr Morton is calling for removal of Atlantic salmon from B.C. salmon farms.

Loosing a virus as lethal and contagious as ISA into the North Pacific is a cataclysmic biological threat to life, said Dr Morton. The European strain of ISA virus can only have come from the Atlantic salmon farms. European strain ISA infected Chile via Atlantic salmon eggs in 2007.

Dr Morton says ISA was first found in Norway in 1984. Since then, there have been lethal outbreaks in every important salmon-farming region around the globe, with the exception or so we thought of B.C. Now we know for sure that it has hit B.C."

The Cohen Inquiry revealed ISA symptoms have been reported in farm salmon in B.C. since 2006. The Fisheries Ministers have written me repeatedly that B.C. is safe from ISA. Clearly they are not in control of the situation."

If there is any hope, we have to turn off the source: Atlantic salmon have to be immediately removed.

The virus was found in two of 48 sockeye smolts collected as part of a long-term study, led by Routledge, on the collapse of Rivers Inlet sockeye populations.

Dr Fred Kibenge of the ISA reference laboratory at the Atlantic Veterinary College in P.E.I. made the diagnosis and notified the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) of the positive results for the European strain of ISA virus.

Says Routledge: ISA is a deadly exotic disease which could have devastating impacts on wild salmon and the many species that depend on them throughout much of British Columbia and beyond."

The combined impacts of this influenza-like virus and the recently identified parvovirus that can suppress the immune system could be particularly deadly.

Dr Morton adds: The New York Times reported from Chile that the Chilean aquaculture industry suffered more than $2 billion in losses, saw its production of Atlantic salmon fall by half, and jobs were lost.

A scientific study concluded that salmon eggs shipped from Norway to Chile are the likely reason for the outbreak of the virus in Chile in 2007. And nearly 40 million Atlantic salmon eggs have been imported into B.C. since 1986.

This is devastating news and something I worked hard to prevent. This has international implications throughout the North Pacific.

Routledge concurs that the only plausible source for the European strain of ISA virus that he found on B.C.s Central Coast is the Atlantic salmon farms.

Rivers Inlet is on the B.C. Central Coast in the heart of the Great Bear Rainforest 100km north of a cluster of Norwegian-owned Atlantic salmon feedlots off Port Hardy and 140km south of Marine Harvests feedlots near Klemtu.

The potential impact of ISA cannot be taken lightly, said Routledge.

There must be an immediate response to assess the extent of the outbreak, determine its source, and to eliminate all controllable sources of the virus even though no country has ever eradicated it once it has arrived.

Routledge is a fish-population statistician who was a founding member of the Pacific Fisheries Resource Conservation Council. Morton received an honorary degree from SFU for her work linking sea lice infestation in wild salmon to fish farming in the Broughton Archipelago, which has sparked international attention.

The two researchers said that the federal Cohen Commission on the decline of sockeye salmon runs in the Fraser River was told that more than 1,000 cases of ISA-type lesions have been reported on B.C. salmon farms since 2006 yet no suspect cases or diagnoses of ISA were reported to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, or to the World Organisation for Animal Health (known as OiE, from its former name of Office International des Epizooties).

Dr Morton, who long ago urged the federal government to close the border to Atlantic salmon eggs as the virus spread in fish farms around the world, says the fact that ISA was found in smolts suggests it has been loose in the Pacific for several years.

Government and industry are clearly not testing effectively. There needs to be an international volunteer epidemiological team formed right now. No one party can own the data. We have to use everything we know to try and contain this.

The researchers say if there is any hope of controlling this disease it must be addressed at the source. The virus is also prone to mutating into increasingly virulent forms.

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