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Alarm bells for salmon farms as disease detected

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Published Date: 05 January 2009
A DISEASE that can damage salmon stocks has been found at a fish farm, it was revealed yesterday.
An occurrence of infectious salmon anaemia (Isa) has been confirmed at one salmon farm and is also suspected at two further sites in the Burra area, west of Shetland.

The farm where Isa has been confirmed has been empty of fish since 21 December,
while one of the other two sites has been empty for six weeks.

The Scottish Government has set up a national disease control centre and is taking action to control the spread of Isa – which does not affect humans but can cause serious damage to stocks of farmed Atlantic salmon in seawater.

Mike Russell, the environment minister, has spoken to the company involved as well as other salmon farming interests.

He said: "While this disease is serious, much was learned from the successfully contained outbreak in 1998-9. We will be applying those lessons vigorously with the clear aim of containing and then eradicating the disease from the current affected site, which in fact is now laying fallow."

A control zone and a wider surveillance zone have been established, with movement restrictions put in place.

A team of fish health inspectors is being sent to Shetland to investigate the affected sites and advise salmon farming firms there on how to operate under the control restrictions.

Investigations into the source and potential spread of the disease will be carried out.

Tavish Scott, MSP for Shetland, said he was "dismayed" a farm in waters there had a confirmed case of Isa.



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  • Last Updated: 04 January 2009 9:54 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Fish farming industry
 
1

Langenburger,

05/01/2009 11:24:49
There is a bigger story to tell Ms Bussey
This Headline Should Have Been
"Wild Scottish Salmon Stocks Decimated and Endangered By Fish Farm Lice
West Coast and East Coast equallly affected
Salmon Farms Killing Off Indigenous Stocks"

Salmon and sea trout smolts used to have a 30% plus return rate to your Scottish rivers - and as recently as the early 70s. (Before Salmon Farming)
Now with your salmon farms and their ongoing and increasing lice epidemics (and their growing resistance to Slice the only medicine) the return rate of wild salmon and wild sea trout is estimated at varying levels below 4% because the lice kill the salmon and sea trout smolts as they migrate each April/May.
And recent scientific proof from both sides of the Atlantic proves this shocking fact.
BUT no policy from your Scottish Government. (so the hidden nassacre will continue)
And no coverage or investigation by the quality Scottish Press (and the slience is deafening).
Do the math guys and wake up to the hollowness of the current Norwegian owned "Scottish" salmon industry and the fact that wild fish make much more commercial sense to the whole nation.
And publicise this ongoing national and international disgrace.

 

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