Abstract
Growth in salmon aquaculture over the past two decades has raised concerns regarding the potential impacts of the industry on neighboring ecosystems and wild fish productivity. Despite limited evidence, sea lice have been identified as a major cause for the decline in some wild Pacific salmon populations on the west coast of Canada. We used sea lice count and management data from farmed and wild salmon, collected over 10 years (2007–2016) in the Muchalat Inlet region of Canada, to evaluate the association between sea lice recorded on salmon farms with the infestation levels on wild out-migrating Chum salmon. Our analyses indicated a significant positive association between the sea lice abundance on farms and the likelihood that wild fish would be infested. However, increased abundance of lice on farms was not significantly associated with the levels of infestation observed on the wild salmon. Our results suggest that Atlantic salmon farms may be an important source for the introduction of sea lice to wild Pacific salmon populations, but that the absence of a dose response relationship indicates that any estimate of farm impact requires more careful evaluation of causal inference than is typically seen in the extant scientific literature.
Highlights
Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus genera) are key species with strong cultural, socioeconomic, recreational, and symbolic significance to the residents of the Pacific Northwest[8,9]
The objective of this study was to evaluate the potential association between sea lice (L. salmonis) infestation observed on Atlantic salmon farms and those on sympatric wild out-migrating Pacific salmon in the Muchalat Inlet region of British Columbia (BC)
Our study found that population-level abundances of sea lice on farmed and wild salmon in Muchalat Inlet were very low
Summary
Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus genera) are key species with strong cultural, socioeconomic, recreational, and symbolic significance to the residents of the Pacific Northwest[8,9]. A number of studies, focused on the Broughton Archipelago region, present contradictory evidence for the impact of sea lice infestation at the interface between farmed and wild salmon in BC. Marty et al could not find any associations between sea lice abundance on farms and the productivity of wild salmon populations in Broughton Archipelago[26]; whereas other researchers have demonstrated a negative correlation[23,25]. The geographical isolation, access to the sea lice infestation data on both farmed and wild salmon, and the dominance of one species of wild Pacific salmon, i.e. Chum The objective of this study was to evaluate the potential association between sea lice (L. salmonis) infestation observed on Atlantic salmon farms and those on sympatric wild out-migrating Pacific salmon in the Muchalat Inlet region of BC
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