The more salmon that growers pack into farms near rivers and streams, the greater the harm done to wild salmon populations, new research suggests.
The problem is sea lice, natural parasites that normally attach to adult salmon with little ill effect and have little contact with vulnerable juvenile salmon.That changes when the fish farms move in, according to a study to be published Friday in the journal Science.In natural conditions, the adult salmon that carry the sea lice are not in the migration channels and rivers at the same time as young pink and chum salmon, so the little fish are rarely exposed.When fish farms move in, hundreds of thousands of adults are raised in floating net pens anchored year-round in the channels where the young wild fish migrate. The study suggested that the density of fish farms reached a tipping point in 2001 that triggered a killer sea lice infestation.Principally funded by the Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, the peer-reviewed study is the latest in a series by a group of scientists trying to push the Canadian government to place more strict regulations on salmon farms to control sea lice.
When West Coast salmon catches in the
``This is the first time scientists have had enough detailed data to actually measure the impact of sea lice on wild salmon populations,'' said Martin Krkosek, lead author of the study and a doctoral candidate at the Center for Mathematical Biology at the University of Alberta.
The Hindu,
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