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Disease interactions in wild and farmed fish

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Title: Disease interactions in wild and farmed fish


1

Disease Interactions Between Farmed and Wild Fish
- Fiction Fact
Kevin H. Amos , National Aquatic Animal Health
Coordinator NOAA Aquaculture Program NOAA
Fisheries Brown Bag Seminar Silver Spring,
Maryland October 11, 2007
2
The Case of the Sickly Salmon
3
Indictment 1
  • Lo and behold, now we have Atlantic salmon in
    this state and now we have viruses (VHS virus) we
    have never seen before.
  • Rob Zuanich, Commercial fisherman, Seattle
    Post Intelligencer, 2/28/89

4
Indictment 2
  • It doesnt take too much gray matter to put two
    and two together. You have to ask how the thing
    (VHS virus) leap-frogs from Europe to Puget
    Sound. The common denominator would be Atlantic
    salmon.
  • Jerry Grover, Regional Administrator, USFWS
  • Seattle Post Intelligencer, 2/28/89

5
Indictment 3
  • escaped Atlantic salmon spread diseases to wild
    salmon
  • Educational Column, Seattle Post Intelligencer,
  • 9/28/03

6
Indictment 4
  • Mathematically coupled data setsindicate
    farm-origin lice induced 9-95 mortality in
    several sympatric wild chum and pink salmon
    populations
  • Krkosek et al, Proceedings of the National
    Academy of Science, October 17,2006.

7
Guilty as charged?
  • Or, are we rushing to judgment?

8
The Complexity of Disease
  • Pathogen factors
  • Host factors
  • Environmental factors

9
Pathogen Factors
  • Virulence
  • Quantity
  • Viability
  • Reservoirs
  • Intermediate life stages or alternate hosts

10
Host Factors
  • Species susceptibility
  • Individual susceptibility
  • General health of host (nutrition, immunity)
  • Age, size, stage in life history
  • Prior exposure, vaccination, natural immunization
  • Time of year
  • Number relative density of cohorts
  • Other infections, primary and secondary

11
Environmental Factors Impacts on host and
pathogen
  • Season
  • Temperature
  • Water chemistry (chemical biological)
  • Tides and currents
  • Food supply for host
  • Presence of other infected hosts, currently or
    previously Overlap Theory

12
Essentials to Cause a Disease Outbreak A
Perfect Storm
  • Adequate number of susceptible hosts
  • Adequate number of viable, virulent pathogens
  • Environmental conditions which favor the
    pathogen, but compromise the host

13
The Culprits Infectious Pathogens
  • Bacteria - BKD
  • Virus - VHS
  • Parasites - Sea lice, Gyros

14
BKD in wild female Chinook
15
EM of RhabdovirusVHSV (strain IV a)
16
Sea Lice
17
Gyro
18
What do all these pathogens have in common?
  • A natural source exists in the wild
  • Were not introduced into the region by farmed
    fish
  • None of the pathogens are exotics

19
Do disease outbreaks occur-
  • In marine pens? Yes!
  • In wild salmon stocks? Yes!
  • In species other than salmon? Yes!
  • Due to pathogen transmission from wild fish to
    cultured fish? Yes!
  • In wild fish due to farmed fish? Maybe.

20
The Evidence
  • Evidence presented will be science-based.
  • The sciences of epidemiology and pathology will
    form the cornerstones of our case.

21
Word of caution on cause and effect!
  • When you hear the clattering of hooves, dont
    assume its a zebra most likely it is a horse!

22
Crime scenes in marine pens and in the wild
  • VHS in the Pacific Great Lakes
  • Sea lice
  • Gyros in Norway/Baltic

23
Facts - VHS virus
  • VHS causes disease in RB trout in Europe
  • VHSV first isolated in U.S. in wild Pacific
    salmon in 1988
  • VHSV determined to be native pathogen in Pacific
    Ocean
  • Major outbreaks occur in the wild in pilchard,
    herring and mackerel
  • New strain of VHS (IV b) in Great Lakes
  • No virus or disease in farmed fish!

24
Broughton Archipelago
  • Sea lice observed on sick wild salmon fry in 2001
  • Near-record low pink returns in 2002
  • Sea lice known to exist on farmed salmon
  • Conclusion by some Low return of pinks in 2002
    due to mortality caused by lice from farms.

25
Pink adult returns to Broughton
26
Facts - Sea lice
  • High prevalence in wild salmon
  • Natural disease episodes recorded prior to marine
    aquaculture 1906, 1918, 1971.
  • Found in non-salmon hosts (Jones)
  • Lice load relatively low on farms
  • No measurable impact on wild salmon populations
    (Beamish)

27
Other Theories for Pink Crash in 2002
  • Feast begets famine redd superimposition,
    disease transmission on redds, poor nutrition due
    to competition.
  • Higher than usual number of fry resulted
    exacerbated lice situation
  • Event(s) on the high sea unrelated to lice

28
Gyros
  • Govt. of Norway imported infected juvenile
    salmon from the Baltic to govt. hatchery.
  • Norwegian stocks naïve to G. salaris
  • Baltic stocks resistant to G. salaris
  • Lack of bio-security allowed Gyros to spread
    within Norway.
  • Huge impacts due to disease mortality and
    eradication efforts

29
Risky Business - Imports
  • Exotic diseases have been introduced by commerce
    (G. salaris, WSSV)
  • Caution! New discoveries often not new (as
    the case of VHS in NW)

30
Summary of Evidence
  • Pathogen does not equal disease!
  • Natural prevalence of pathogens in wild fish
    significant
  • Juveniles stocked in marine pens are
    pathogen-free
  • Exotics pathogens pose a significant risk

31
Judgment
  • Evidence insufficient to link farmed fish to
    disease outbreaks in wild Pacific salmon
  • Evidence suggests wild fish are the major source
    of pathogens
  • Disease outbreaks occur in all populations of
    wild and cultured aquatic animals when we have
    the Perfect Storm

32
The Sentence
  • Bio-security at farms is crucial
  • Investigate causes of fish kills farmed and
    wild
  • Implement a national aquatic animal health plan
    (NAAHP)

33
Objectives of NAAHP
  • Protect wild and cultured animals
  • Facilitate safe and legal trade
  • Ensure availability of diagnostic and health
    certification services
  • Define roles and responsibilities
  • Meet U.S. obligations (OIE and WTO)

34
Fact
  • Kevin S. Amos of PPBES fame is not my evil twin
    brother, even though we were both born in the
    same hospital in Lincoln, Nebraska.

35
Acknowledgments
  • The following have contributed to this
    presentation - Thanks!
  • WDFW, DFO, Jim Chacko, Jim Winton, Ted Meyer,
    Garth Traxler, Scott LaPatra, Gail Kurath, Bill
    Batts, Pacific Fisheries Resource Conservation
    Council, BC Salmon Farmers, ADFG, Richard
    Beamish.
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