a new salmon genomics project

Genome British Columbia :: Salmon health: past, present and future.

Genome British Columbia, the Pacific Salmon Foundation and Fisheries and Oceans Canada are embarking on a remarkable partnership to discover the microbes present in salmon in BC that may be undermining the productivity of BC’s Pacific salmon. The project will conduct epidemiological assessments to explore the transmission dynamics and historical presence of detected microbes, with key focus on microbes that are suspected globally to be causing disease in salmon. Researchers will apply genomic technology to identify and verify which microbes are presently carried by BC’s wild and cultured fish.

The project is being managed in four sequential Phases with Phase 1 valued at $930,000. The first phase is taking place over 12 months, concluding mid-2013, and comprises the collection phase of both cultured and wild salmon. While later phases are subject to final funding, Phase 2 involves rigorous analysis of the tissue samples collected in Phase 1 and in previous research. Using molecular and genomic tools, the research team will attempt to determine when and where microbes may have been transmitted.  The research results will begin to rank microbes by their potential to cause disease in BC salmon based on relationships with microbes associated with disease in other parts of the world and histological evidence from salmon in BC.  Phase 3 will focus in on the microbes identified in Phase 2, with an emphasis on microbes that have not been extensively researched and that are thought to be of pathological significance in salmon. Phase 4 will include reporting of research and presentations to management agencies on the potential utility of methods developed and the application of outcomes to future monitoring.

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Blue Biotechnology

CGRASP_fish
My cGRASP blurb in the European Life Sciences Journal:

Salmon,trout, and the other salmonids are species of great economic and social importance to
Canada and many other nations worldwide, particularly for coastal, rural and Aboriginal communities. The Consortium for Genomic Research on All Salmonids Project (cGRASP) integrates salmonid programmes in four nations – Canada, Norway, USA and the UK – into a unified research effort to develop critical genomics resources and tools that will further our understanding of salmonids, and support research in the areas of aquaculture, wild stock management and environmental protection.

in Cod we trust


Already world leaders in Salmon farming (though losing a bit of ground to the Chileans), the Norwegians are taking on the mighty cod.
Seed:

"TROMSOE, Norway (AFP)—After perfecting the art of salmon farming, Norwegians now hope to repeat the success with the trickier cod, which has been fished to near extinction in some parts of the world.
‘The success of the farmed salmon is part of the reason for the optimism we see in cod farming today,’ says Jens Oestli of the Norwegian Institute of Fisheries and Aquaculture Research in Tromsoe in northern Norway.
This Scandinavian nation began salmon farming in the 1960s. It now exports three times more farmed salmon than wild salmon, attaining 383,085 tonnes in 2005.
Cod farmers are now gambling on a similar boom."

Fish farmers in Canada are engaged in similar research, notably the Atlantic Cod Genomics And Broodstock Development project. Link.  It’s obvious to me that we need to move the large-scale exploitation of sea food into an agricultural model, away from our hunter gatherer ways, or we’ll lose these resources altogether.