The Guardian (USA)

Canada ignored warnings of virus infecting farmed and wild salmon

- Leyland Cecco

Canada was warned in 2012 by its own scientists that a virus was infecting both farmed and wild salmon, but successive government­s ignored the expert advice, saying for years that risks to salmon were low.

Justin Trudeau’s government has said it will phase out open-pen industrial fish farms off the coast of British Columbia by 2025. But both his government and the previous Conservati­ve government were in possession of a newly released report that linked large-scale farms and wild salmon to the highly contagious Piscine orthoreovi­rus (PRV).

In 2012, biologists with the department of fisheries and oceans investigat­ed the presence of the virus, which has been found in both farmed and wild salmon. In March, a federal informatio­n commission­er ordered the report be released, after a multi-year access-toinformat­ion battle between the group Wild First, which opposes open-pen salmon farms, and the federal government. Details of the report were made public on Thursday by the Globe and Mail.

Kristi Miller-Saunders, a federal biologist and an author on the study, called the delay in releasing the report a “travesty” and said its omission has contribute­d to longstandi­ng doubt over whether farmed salmon were infecting wild salmon.

PRV causes anemia and jaundice in farmed salmon. But in wild Chinook, whose numbers have collapsed in recent years, the virus is associated with a different disease which causes blood cells to rupture, leading to kidney and liver damage.

Miller-Saunders said in a statement her research was the first to discover the virus in North America and that the virus was “being actively transmitte­d between farmed and wild salmon in B.C.”

A study last year from the University of British Columbia confirmed her work, concluding that the closer wild Chinook are to fish farms, the higher the likelihood they’ll be infected by the Piscine orthoreovi­rus.

The decade-old findings take on a new urgency as both the federal government and officials in British

Columbia grapple with a decimation of wild Pacific salmon stocks in the region, which experts fear could have far-reaching ecological consequenc­es.

In addition to PRV, biologists have also argued that sea lice and mouth rot, which can be fatal in salmon, is also being transferre­d from farmed to wild salmon.

Alexandra Morton, an independen­t biologist who has studied Pacific salmon for the last thirty years, has long argued that open-pen farms are responsibl­e for the presence of the illnesses plaguing wild salmon and alleges the country’s fisheries ministry too often sides with corporate interests.

“There are scientists that genuinely care about investigat­ing these issues. And there is the middle level of the department that is suppressin­g people like Dr Miller. They’re ignoring all of the outside research,” Morton told the Guardian last year amid frustratio­n that critical research findings were being withheld.

Trudeau’s government has pledged to phase out open-pen salmon farms by 2025 – a move fiercely opposed by operators. Industry has warned the closures will result in millions of farm salmon being prematurel­y killed as well as the loss of hundreds of jobs and are fighting the orders in court.

“Industry should have known this was coming and seen the writing on the walls. They should have started transition­ing to different kinds of enclosures. Instead, they relied for years on the government – on the department of fisheries and oceans – to hide their sins,” said Morton.

The BC Salmon Farmers Associatio­n said in a statement it would rather see peer-reviewed informatio­n about industry rather than “ad-hoc” releases through Canada’s access to informatio­n laws.

 ?? ?? Salmon swimming in the river during the spawning season in British Columbia, Canada. Photograph: edb3_16/Getty Images/iStockphot­o
Salmon swimming in the river during the spawning season in British Columbia, Canada. Photograph: edb3_16/Getty Images/iStockphot­o

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