Public
release date: 3-Mar-2004
Contact:
Alexandra Morton
250-949-1664
National
Research Council of Canada
Aquatic
scientists divided on role of sea lice from salmon farms in decline
of native salmon in B.C.
French
version
Ottawa,
March 2, 2004 - Salmon farms in British Columbia may pose
a threat to wild salmon stocks, a paper published today in the
Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences claims. The
paper presents evidence that native fish sampled near the farms
are more heavily infected with parasitic sea lice. Lead author
Alexandra Morton, a registered professional biologist and private
researcher, believes the parasites multiply on the farms and are
then transmitted to juvenile native salmon, causing recent drastic
declines in wild fish populations. "If we don't do anything, we're
definitely going to lose the wild salmon," said Morton.
Morton
monitored the levels of infection of sea lice (unrelated to human
lice), naturally occurring parasites that infect salmon only,
on juvenile pink and chum salmon in British Columbia's Broughton
Archipelago, a chain of islands between the mainland coast and
the northern end of Vancouver Island. She then compared infection
rates on salmon from sites near to and far from the farms.
"We
found 3 cases of sea lice in a sample of 1,018 juvenile salmon
outside of the Broughton Archipelago. Within the Broughton Archipelago,"
where there are 28 Atlantic salmon farms, "we found 4,338 of this
species of sea louse on 1,138 salmon," -- a 1,000-fold difference,
said Morton. Her study showed potentially lethal levels of infection
in 90 percent of wild juvenile salmon. Morton believes the young
native salmon become infected when they swim near the farms during
their migration from freshwater streams to the open ocean.
Morton
said that to preserve native salmon stocks, "the farm fish have
to be separated from the wild fish. There are alternative technologies
that allow farmers to grow fish in facilities that provide a barrier
to the marine environment." A barrier would prevent transfer of
disease and parasites between the farmed and wild fish.
Because
of concerns about possible effects of sea lice on native fish,
11 of 27 Atlantic salmon farms in the Broughton Archipelago were
closed during the migration of the pink salmon in 2003 (a practice
called "fallowing"). "It was a big economic loss to the farmers,"
said Morton. And it didn't entirely solve the problem. "We still
had over 20 percent of the fish infected, and the farmers can
not repeat this measure this year."
Scott
McKinley, Professor and Senior Canada Research Chair of Animal
Sciences at the University of British Columbia and Executive Scientific
Director of AquaNET, a National Network of Centres of Excellence
in aquaculture and environmental research whose mandate is to
foster a sustainable aquaculture sector in Canada, disagrees with
Morton's conclusions. He suggests that there is no evidence that
native fish are declining due to farming.
"With
any fish population, one or two years of surveys does not make
a trend. . .. There have been drastic declines in pink salmon
before, and that was before there were farms here," said McKinley.
"There is no study published showing a cause-and-effect relationship
between sea lice on wild and farmed fish. . . All the work that's
out there is based on correlations."
McKinley
suggests that other explanations for the population fluctuations
in wild fish are also likely. For example, population crashes
could result from limited resource availability or fishing pressure.
Fluctuations in water temperature on a global scale, such as those
caused by El Niņo, could make the salmon sick and stressed. "If
you happen to be weak or stressed in terms of general health,
you tend to be more susceptible to parasite infection."
Pressures
from environmentalist groups about sea lice are forcing the aquaculture
sector to make sacrifices based on inadequate information, McKinley
said. He said that in the Broughton Archipelago "the farms were
fallowed because of pressure from environmentalists who believed
that there was a problem with sea lice on the farms. Although
this wasn't backed by scientific evidence, farms cooperated and
likely lost a lot of money."
Morton
argues that similar outbreaks of sea lice paired with declines
in native salmon in Norway, Scotland, and Ireland corroborate
her findings. "In Norway, there are very strict regulations about
how many lice you're allowed on your fish."
However, McKinley stressed that environmental conditions in Europe
are different from those in British Columbia, and he warns against
global extrapolations. He said that AquaNET, in collaboration
with other national and international scientists, plans to study
how native and farmed fish are affected by sea lice and conduct
risk analyses of lice treatments.
Morton
insists that if regulatory action is delayed, the consequences
to wild fish could be serious. "The Norwegian scientists have
said to me that they expected this problem to arise on the Pacific
coast and that we will have good years for sea lice and bad years,
but in the end we will lose our wild stocks. That seems unnecessary.
Wild salmon are ecologically critical, and we have other options."
###
The
Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences is a scientific
peer-reviewed journal published by the NRC Research Press.
For
the complete article, see http://pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/cgi-bin/rp/rp2_tocs_e?cjfas_cjfas2-04_61.
Contact:
Alexandra Morton
Raincoast Research
250-949-1664
250-902-1664
Scott
McKinley
University of British Columbia
AquaNet
604-666-1298 (AquaNet)
604-666-5199
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