Myself I will stay away from Farmed Salmon for a tad.

Goober

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Jan 23, 2009
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Myself I will stay away from Farmed Salmon for a tad

No consider all the special handling for these fish. Now go eat them. Not Freaking Likely.

Quarantined Nova Scotia salmon headed to New Brunswick for processing - The Globe and Mail

Cooke is the first company to process salmon with the disease under new protocols set out by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, company spokeswoman Nell Halse said.

The federal agency said the virus does not pose a risk to human health and is safe for consumption.

“They’re perfectly safe to eat,” said Ms. Halse. “In this case we’ve got fish that are market size. There’s nothing wrong with them from a human health perspective.

“It’s really only an issue for fish health. It’s nothing to do with human health.”

Ms. Halse said Canadian Food Inspection Agency officials have been at both sites over the past six months developing proper guidelines for the processing.

That includes disinfecting the fish plant and setting protocols for managing the waste water in the tanker trucks that transport the fish.

Ms. Halse said everyone involved has gone through strict training on how to handle the fish to prevent the virus from spreading.

“All of the boat captains, the truck drivers, the plant workers have all been trained to know how to handle these fish so that there’s no possibility of the virus getting back out into the ocean or going to other farms.”

Last spring, Cooke had to kill hundreds of thousands of salmon because of an outbreak of infectious salmon anemia in pens outside Nova Scotia’s Shelburne Harbour.

Ms. Halse said those fish were killed because they were only halfway through production and too small to be marketed.

She said a different strain of the virus was detected at its Coffin Island farm last June, so the site was quarantined and the salmon were grown to full market size.

If the federal agency doesn’t order the fish to be killed off, the farmer is obligated to process and market the fish, Ms. Halse said. The government compensates salmon growers in instances that a cull is ordered.
 

Goober

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Not really, if you're good at cooking fish, the spine and all the bones pull out nicely, if you aren't good at cooking fish cut it into steaks.

I like mine on the BBQ- I make a blackened trout that is tasty. Imagine you could do the same with pickerel. Or if you have some tips will to try.
 

Tonington

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Oct 27, 2006
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Just so we're clear...the salmon weren't clinically diseased, they tested positive for ISA virus. This past year there have been a couple positive tests at different sites across the Atlantic region, coinciding with returning wild Atlantic salmon. All for the variant of ISA called HPR0, think of it like the H in H_N_ influenza. HPR0 is a low pathogenicity strain of the ISA virus. It doesn't normally cause infection in the salmon, but it can mutate like the influenza virus does. Depopulation is the standard procedure these days because if it does mutate into a more pathogenic strain, it can cause massive mortality. Even when a fish is vaccinated, it can and will still test positive for the virus. The vaccine doesn't stop the virus from entering the body, it just provides an immune response so that the body has stored antibodies ready to aid in preventing clinical disease from the virus when and if it does enter the body.

And as for salmon, the wild salmon you eat will test positive for all sorts of viruses, as will most of the food you bring home from the grocery store. There are millions of viruses in a tea spoon of seawater. Most are inert and do nothing. All of the fish pathogenic viruses will do nothing to a human. In this case the site gets quarantined and then they monitor the health of the fish, and they were able to harvest them.

If it were the strain we use at work for testing vaccines, many of the fish would be sick, and some would die. With time the infection clears.

It's not surprising at all that farm fish will test positive for virus after entering the ocean. They are raised in water treated to make it virus and bacteria free. The ocean is not, there are fish swimming around all the time carrying viruses, bacteria, and parasites. The farmed fish you could think of as being raised in a bubble, given some vaccinations, and then sent out into the wide world.
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
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kelowna bc
It makes me happy I don't like fish period except for Lobster. Fish farms are not the
way to go in my opinion and I don't support industries I disagree with/
 

Goober

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Jan 23, 2009
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Just so we're clear...the salmon weren't clinically diseased, they tested positive for ISA virus. This past year there have been a couple positive tests at different sites across the Atlantic region, coinciding with returning wild Atlantic salmon. All for the variant of ISA called HPR0, think of it like the H in H_N_ influenza. HPR0 is a low pathogenicity strain of the ISA virus. It doesn't normally cause infection in the salmon, but it can mutate like the influenza virus does. Depopulation is the standard procedure these days because if it does mutate into a more pathogenic strain, it can cause massive mortality. Even when a fish is vaccinated, it can and will still test positive for the virus. The vaccine doesn't stop the virus from entering the body, it just provides an immune response so that the body has stored antibodies ready to aid in preventing clinical disease from the virus when and if it does enter the body.

And as for salmon, the wild salmon you eat will test positive for all sorts of viruses, as will most of the food you bring home from the grocery store. There are millions of viruses in a tea spoon of seawater. Most are inert and do nothing. All of the fish pathogenic viruses will do nothing to a human. In this case the site gets quarantined and then they monitor the health of the fish, and they were able to harvest them.

If it were the strain we use at work for testing vaccines, many of the fish would be sick, and some would die. With time the infection clears.

It's not surprising at all that farm fish will test positive for virus after entering the ocean. They are raised in water treated to make it virus and bacteria free. The ocean is not, there are fish swimming around all the time carrying viruses, bacteria, and parasites. The farmed fish you could think of as being raised in a bubble, given some vaccinations, and then sent out into the wide world.

We are crawling with bacteria and viruses. We have approx 4 to 5 k differing types of bacteria in out stomachs. What is the name of that specialist that due to a patients treatments must have shxt from a close relative inserted.
Then we get to this.
And all those precautions make me feel warm all over.