The New Sea Lice Paper

The PNAS paper confirms salmon farms are the “main source” of lice on juvenile salmon. But their conclusion that sea lice from salmon farms do not harm wild salmon is flawed.  Many teams of scientists have examined the pink salmon numbers in the Broughton.  This team clumped all the rivers together which means not all the runs had the same exposure to salmon farms.  Other teams have examined each run individually and these two methods give opposite results.  There is no reason to doubt the work that examines each run. If these authors want to champion their methods they need to explain why it is more accurate.

The authors suggest that salmon farms may actually benefit wild salmon, that perhaps sea lice are a valuable source of food for juvenile salmon that can improve their productivity. This is based on an observation I made in a paper and it is completely out of context.  It was an exceptional observation which is why I wrote about it.
 
The findings in this paper run contrary to international research that has shown farm-origin sea lice threaten wild salmon populations. In 2003, Norway responded by establishing National Salmon Fjords to protect wild salmon from salmon farms. In 2008, the BC government prohibited expansion of the industry onto the central coast.
 
This paper is a distant outlier to a growing international body of literature pin-pointing decline in wild salmon populations near salmon farms they cannot simply ignore the weight of evidence stating an opposite conclusion. They need explain why they found the opposite.
 
The severe physical impact of sea lice on juvenile salmon is indisputable. If these authors want to say some other disease is killing sea lice infested salmon, they need to provide actual medical data, not just theory.

Multiple gravids[1]

Comments

2 responses to “The New Sea Lice Paper”

  1. This paper achieved nearly instant global exposure in media outlets before anyone had a chance to read it.
    Is this science or is it public relations?
    That apart, anyone wanting to read the paper has to pay an American organization to get a copy. And as far as I can tell, the authors used a vast store of data collected by other than the authors and previously carefully hidden from view from even our provincial and federal regulators.
    A usual credo in scientific papers is a description of how the subjects were sampled, how the authors maintained quality control, how they drew conclusions. Since the paper in question is not generally available to interested readers, one can only conclude that it was written not with scientific inquiry in mind but written to satisfy a corporate agenda.
    If Marine Harvest Canada was so confident of the results, perhaps they could make the paper available to a general audience rather than hide behind the skirts of a pay-per-view publication.
    Transparency?
    I think not.
    -30-

  2. Hi Alexandra,
    I’m a journalism student and huge fan of your work. I was hoping to talk to you about a story that I’m pitching to the Canadian Foundation for Innovation for emerging science journalists. I know you have a lot of experience in the communication abilities of orcas (I’ve read “Listening to Whales” too many times to count) and I was looking at addressing how the fishing industry is affecting these communications. Robert Dewey at the University of Victoria is doing related research. Please email me back at graham.slaughter@ryerson.ca.
    Best,
    Graham