Guest guest Posted May 1, 2007 Report Share Posted May 1, 2007 At 06:08 PM 4/30/07, you wrote: >The New York Times (pg. A4), Apr. 21, 2007 >[Printer-friendly version] > >FISH-KILLING VIRUS SPREADING IN THE GREAT LAKES > >By Susan Saulny > >CHICAGO, April 20 -- A virus that has already killed tens of thousands >of fish in the eastern Great Lakes is spreading, scientists said, and >now threatens almost two dozen aquatic species over a wide swath of >the lakes and nearby waterways. > >The virus, a mutated pathogen not native to North America that causes >hemorrhaging and organ failure, is not harmful to humans, even if they >eat contaminated fish. But it is devastating to the ecosystem and so >unfamiliar, experts said, that its full biological impact might not be >clear for years. It is also having a significant impact on the lakes' >$4 billion fishing industry. > >There is no known treatment for the virus. As a result, scientists are >focusing on managing its spread to uncontaminated water -- quite a >challenge since the Great Lakes are linked and fall under the >jurisdiction of several states and provinces in Canada. > > " Updates over the winter suggest it has spread further than we >thought, even last year, " said John Dettmers, a senior fisheries >biologist for the Great Lakes Fisheries Commission in Ann Arbor, Mich. > > " It's really early, " Mr. Dettmers said. " As much as I'd like to say >we know exactly what's going on, we don't. We're all sitting here on >the edge of our chairs waiting to see how bad it's going to be this >year. " > >When it was first detected about two years ago, the virus had affected >only two species in a limited amount of water. But it has aggressively >spread to other areas and other fish and is now being confirmed in >Lake Huron after infecting Lakes Ontario and Erie, Lake St. Clair, the >St. Lawrence River and the Niagara River. It is suspected in Lake >Michigan as well, although there is no official confirmation. > >Last year, the virus, called viral hemorrhagic septicemia and known as >V.H.S., caused untold thousands of dead fish to wash up in places like >the eastern shoreline of Lake Ontario, a warning sign that scientists >said could just be the tip of the iceberg in terms of what is going on >underwater. > >The five Great Lakes -- Superior, Erie, Huron, Michigan and Ontario -- >hold 20 percent of the world's fresh surface water. > > " We anticipate that this will continue and get worse over the next >few years, " said Dr. Jim Casey, associate professor of virology at >Cornell University. " We fear there may be more widespread presence of >the virus. " > >One of Dr. Casey's colleagues researching the virus, Dr. Paul Bowser, >a professor of aquatic animal medicine, added, " This is a new >pathogen and for the first number of years -- 4, 5 or 10 years -- >things are going to be pretty rough, then the animals will become more >immune and resistant and the mortalities will decline. " > >No one is sure where the virus came from or how it got to the Great >Lakes. In the late 1980s, scientists saw a version of V.H.S. in salmon >in the Pacific Northwest, which was the first sighting anywhere in >North America. V.H.S. is also present in the Atlantic Ocean. But the >genesis of a new, highly aggressive mutated strain concentrating on >the Great Lakes is a biological mystery. > > " We really don't know how it got there, " said Jill Roland, a fish >pathologist and assistant director for aquaculture at the U.S. >Department of Agriculture. " People's awareness of V.H.S. in the lakes >was unknown until 2005. But archived samples showed the virus was >there as early as 2003. " > >Scientists pointed to likely suspects, mainly oceangoing vessels that >dump ballast water from around the world into the Great Lakes. (Ships >carry ballast water to help provide stability, but it is often >contaminated and provides a home for foreign species. The water is >loaded and discharged as needed for balance.) > >Fish migrate naturally, but also move with people as they cast nets >for sport, for instance, or move contaminated water on pleasure boats >from lake to lake. > >The United States Department of Agriculture issued an emergency order >in October to prohibit the movement of live fish that are susceptible >to the virus out of the Great Lakes or bordering states. The order was >later amended to allow limited movement of fish that tested negative >for the virus. > > " Getting rid of it is extremely hard to foresee, " said Henry >Henderson, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's Midwest >office in Chicago. " These species spread, and reproduce. It is a >living pollution. " ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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