Fish pathologist for the Animal Health Centre corrects Grigg...again

February 3, 2012

Grigg assertions need to be corrected
 Gary Marty, Courier-Islander February 3, 2012
 
In Ray Grigg's column in the Jan. 27 Courier-Islander, "The Cohen Commission: Following traces", he reports final ISAV arguments submitted to the Cohen Commission by Gregory J. McDade and Lisa Glowacki, counsel for Dr. Alexandra Morton and the Aquaculture Coalition. However, these arguments include inaccuracies that need to be corrected.

The Aquaculture Coalition argument states that after Molly Kibenge's work on ISAV in 2004, DFO "decided to not test any further wild salmon." and implied that this was "wilful blindness" and "gross negligence."

This is not correct. Between September 2004 and September 2005, DFO collected 875 juvenile Pacific salmon from the Broughton Archipelago. Samples from these fish were analyzed for ISAV by PCR at the BC Animal Health Centre (the provincial veterinary diagnostic laboratory).

All results were negative - no virus. In my role as the fish pathologist for the Animal Health Centre, results from all 100 sockeye salmon included in this study were disclosed to the Cohen Commission. The Aquaculture Coalition did not submit my report as evidence.

Mr. Grigg also reports another Aquaculture Coalition argument, "The evidence is now clear that Dr. Marty was conducting PCR tests with no confirmed validity," and regarding the specific design of the PCR test; "It was a primer that had never been through the validation process."

This is not correct. The Animal Health Centre routinely uses an ISAV PCR test developed and validated in-house using protocols approved as part of its certification by the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians (AAVLD). Cohen Commission Exhibit #2049 describes the validation of this assay: "sensitive to 30 copies." This ISAV test, like some of those recommended by the OIE, was designed to detect all known ISAV strains (Exhibit #2082). To further validate our results, we took every sample we had tested for ISAV from Jan. 26, 2011, through Oct. 25, 2011, and retested each sample using at least two PCR tests that are recommended by the OIE for diagnosis of ISAV. Again, all results were negative (Exhibit # 2079).

I am confident that diseases impact wild Pacific salmon populations, but in complex ways. Rather than focus on a single pathogen (ISAV) that is not known to affect Pacific salmon, we need long-term systematic annual studies of migrating salmon that include a wide range of diagnostic tests (see my Cohen Public Submission #818).

Gary Marty BC Ministry of Agriculture


Gary Marty was responding to the following:

The Cohen Commission: Following traces
By Ray Grigg, Special to Courier-Islander January 27, 2012
 
The mystery of the disappearing wild salmon may be closer to being solved due to the reconvened Cohen Commission and the extraordinary three days of hearings held in December, 2011. As earlier testimony revealed, many environmental factors affect the survival of wild salmon.

Evidence now confirms that government policy supports the salmon farming industry, and that the industry has been willing to exploit this advantage to win regulatory concessions for its economic gain - in the words of one Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) official, the industry seemed "to dictate" policy. These concessions may have involved relaxed importation, inspection and quarantine of Atlantic salmon eggs, and inadequate supervision of fish health.

Summary statements written by Gregory McDade and Lisa Glowaki, two of the lawyers representing Dr. Alexandra Morton at the inquiry, describe how DFO failed to pursue evidence suggesting that ISAv might be in wild salmon, despite an independent 2004 test that suggested all Cultus Lake sockeye were infected. "Instead it buried the results completely for seven years," notes the summary, and "decided to not test any further wild salmon. This reaction is not consistent with the scientific method or a precautionary approach - rather it shows action of a political nature - denial and suppression of an inconvenient fact. In legal terms, it is known as willful blindness, also characterized in some circumstances as gross negligence." This opinion is reinforced by DFO's failure to submit any ISAv documentation to the Commission.

McDade and Glowaki suggest that the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) was also implicated in this scheme of "willful blindness." It had no interest in the well-being of wild salmon per se; its mandate was to monitor diseases and promote the economic value of food products. Fish diseases were inconveniences that complicated this commercial objective.

ISAv was a reportable infection that would have alerted trade partners and the international community to risk, thereby incurring trade damage.

"Safe trade" is the subject of testimony given by Dr. Kim Klotins, a senior CFIA official, to Krista Robertson, a lawyer acting for First Nations:

Robertson: "But is it also part of the mandate of the CFIA to ensure that... trade interests of Canadian companies or companies operating in Canada such as Norwegian fish farm companies, are not harmed by any kind of finding or allegation of disease?"

Dr. Klotins: "So if, let's say, we do find ISA in B.C. and all of a sudden markets are closed, our role [CFIA] is then to try to renegotiate or negotiate market access to those countries. Now what it will be is a matter of they'll let us know what the requirements are. We'll let them know what we can do and whether we can meet that market access. If we can't meet it, then there will be no trade basically."

In other words, the discovery of ISAv in BC wild or farmed salmon could be an economic disaster that could even end trade in fish products. The CFIA didn't want to find ISAv, and the evidence suggests it took active measures to confiscate fish samples that may have indicated ISAv was here. DFO - which supported the salmon farming industry - didn't want to find ISAv either, and took active measures to hide findings and suppress research that may have exposed it. And the salmon farming industry certainly didn't want to discover ISAv in its brood stock or net-pens - such a discovery would have had devastating environmental, market and public relations ramifications.

So, why did salmon farmers not find ISAv in their testing of more than 4,700 samples of farmed fish? The sole veterinarian testing their fish was Dr. Gary Marty, who noted more than 1,100 instances of lesions that were commensurate with ISAv, but he always recorded negative results for the viral infection. The industry, therefore, could confidently announce, as it frequently did, "that the ISA virus has never been found in British Columbia" (Times-Colonist, Dec. 16/11).

McDade and Glowaki explain this puzzle. First, not all ISAv strains are lethal so salmon farms might not notice high mortality. Like an influenza, it can exist as a low level infection that only becomes virulent when it mutates - particularly in high population densities at fish farms and hatcheries. But ISAv does impair fish health - especially wild fish in stressful survival conditions - and it leaves identifiable cellular markers. This is what the genomic specialists Drs. Kristi Miller, Fredrick Kibenge and Are Nylund found in their independent sampling of wild salmon tissue.

Was the salmon farming industry concealing evidence of ISAv? Not exactly. The following is the McDade and Glowaki technical explanation: "The evidence is now clear that Dr. Marty was conducting PCR tests with no confirmed validity. His PCR test was developed in-house, by a master's student. This methodology used a primer that was different from that approved by the OIE or by the Moncton lab. It was a primer that had never been through the validation process, nor even apparently a peer-reviewed publication. Dr. Kibenge testified that in his opinion this test would not be sensitive to finding ISA." So the "self-invented" test had no validity and "in our respectful submission, this 'non-disclosure' is tantamount to deliberate deception." DFO had chosen to be "willfully blind" by relying only on the invalid testing of this single lab, and the CFIA was contented to avoid the complexities of discovering ISAv, no such disease was ever found by anyone responsible for detecting it.

The ISAv evidence will eventually be weighed by Judge Bruce Cohen.

But the virus is now in the realm of public awareness, and the seismic effects could eventually shake the salmon farming industry, the wild fishery, and the government agencies that were supposed to be safeguarding an invaluable marine ecology.

EDITOR'S NOTE: In a letter to the editor in the Wednesday Jan. 25 Courier-Islander Ian Roberts of Marine Harvest wrote, in part: "... millions of Atlantic salmon were introduced to BC and Washington state at the request of many sport fishermen. From 1905 to 1935, 8.6 million Atlantic eggs and fry were released into BC rivers, while Washington kept trying to establish natural populations until 1991...

"Although no new fish disease has been confirmed, a scientist at the Cohen Commission recently provided evidence that a 'unique genetic signature' never before identified in the Pacific Northwest may have been present well before Atlantic salmon farming began in BC (1985).

'We have, since then, sequenced from these 1986 samples and found that the three fixed base differences that we see, today, existed in 1986 as well, which suggests that not only has this been here for at least 25 years, but it's been here probably quite considerably longer than that, given that there were already fixed differences that existed in 1986.' - Dr. Kristi Miller."