I'm curious Bill. Which of the salmon farms or hatcheries is infected with ISA?
I don,t recall mentioning anything about hatcheries or fish farms in my original post.
Let me walk you through the logic behind my question.
Where do you suppose all the Atlantic Salmon in BC come from? If the virus is indeed in the eggs, it must come from the fish carrying the eggs. Therefore, if the virus is in the fish it must come from the farms or the hatcheries. The only circumstance where that would not be true is where the virus is endemic to the region in which case, wild fish are already constantly exposed to it. The problem with that theory is that it would result in all farmed Atlantics being exposed to it as well, and with the greater susceptibility of Atlantics to the virus, would result in constant and frequent ISA outbreaks on the farms.
Since ISA testing is mandatory on the farms and hatcheries as well as in the best interests of the farms, and since positive results are legally reportable, the presence of the virus on the farms and in the hatcheries will be known and reported and that record must exist if the eggs are indeed infected.
You are claiming the Atlantic eggs are carrying the virus. I am asking you if you can support your claim that Atlantic eggs carry the virus by showing the record of infected farms or hatcheries, a record that must exist if the eggs are indeed carrying the virus, or whether you are saying that like the birth of Christ, the presence of ISA in the eggs is a case of immaculate conception.