Lethal virus detected in wild Pacific salmon   						 						 A lethal and highly contagious marine virus has  been detected for the first time in wild salmon in the Pacific  Northwest, researchers in British Columbia said Monday, stirring concern  that it could spread, as it has in Chile, Scotland and elsewhere.
   						 						By  CORNELIA DEAN and  RACHEL NUWER
   						The New York Times
   					  						  							 						  							 							  								  
   								                                                                                                                               									                                                                                                                             						  						A lethal and highly contagious marine virus has been detected  for the first time in wild salmon in the Pacific Northwest, researchers  in British Columbia said Monday, stirring concern that it could spread,  as it has in Chile, Scotland and elsewhere.
    Farms hit by the virus, infectious salmon anemia, have lost 70  percent or more of their fish in recent decades. Until now, however, the  virus never had been confirmed on the West Coast of North America.
    The virus does not affect humans.
    The researchers, from Simon Fraser University and elsewhere, said at a  news conference in Vancouver that the virus had been found in two of 48  juvenile fish collected as part of a study of sockeye salmon in Rivers  Inlet, on the central coast of British Columbia. The study was  undertaken after scientists observed a decline in the number of young  sockeye.
    Richard Routledge, an environmental scientist at the university who  leads the sockeye study, suggested the virus had spread from the  province's aquaculture industry, which has imported millions of Atlantic  salmon eggs over the past 25 years, primarily from Iceland and  Scandinavia. He acknowledged no direct evidence of that link existed,  but noted the two fish had tested positive for the European strain of  infectious salmon anemia.
    The virus could have "a devastating impact" not only on the region's  farmed and wild salmon but on the many species that depend on them in  the food web, such as grizzly bears, killer whales and wolves, Routledge  said.
    "No country has ever gotten rid of it once it arrives," he said in a statement.
    The only barrier between the salmon farms and wild fish is a net,  Routledge noted at the news conference, opening the way for "pathogens  sweeping in and out." No vaccine or treatment exists for infectious  salmon anemia.
    Gary Marty, the fish pathologist for the province's Ministry of  Agriculture, said the Canadian Food Inspection Agency would seek fish  samples from the researchers and run its own tests.
    The British Columbia Salmon Farmers Association, an industry group,  said fish health departments had tested for the virus regularly on the  farms "and have never found a positive case." Marty confirmed no cases  had been found in that testing.
    Still, "if these results are valid, this could be a threat to our  business and the communities that rely on our productive industry," said  Stewart Hawthorn, managing director for Grieg Seafood, an association  member.
    At the news conference, the Simon Fraser researchers said Fred  Kibenge, a researcher at Atlantic Veterinary College at the University  of Prince Edward Island, the global center for tests detecting the  virus, had confirmed its presence in the two fish. They called for  widespread testing to determine where the virus exists in the region and  in what fish.
    Alexandra Morton, a researcher and activist who collected the sockeye  samples and is an outspoken critic of salmon farming practices in  British Columbia, called the virus "a cataclysmic threat" to both salmon  and herring, which also can contract the disease.
    "If we test 5 million fish and found two sick, OK," she said. "But 48  in the middle of nowhere?" The inlet where the samples were taken is 60  miles from the nearest salmon farm, the researchers said.
    Fishery experts with no connection to the study agreed the threat was  serious. James Winton, who leads the fish health research group at the  Western Fisheries Research Center in Seattle, an arm of the U.S.  Geological Survey, called it a "disease emergency" and urged that  research begin at once to determine how far the virus had spread.
    According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,  infectious salmon anemia virus morphed from a benign form in nature into  a "novel virulent strain" when salmon stocks entered Norway's densely  packed salmon farms. Rather than getting picked off by a predator, a  sick fish would undergo a slow death in a crowded pen, shedding virus  particles.
    Offshore saltwater pens supply most of the Atlantic salmon sold in the United States.
  seattletimes.nwsource.com
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