How Sea Lice Are Killing Young Salmon
Sea lice were once never found on young salmon, until we created fish farms.
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Warmer ocean water and poor coordination of treatment at fish farms is causing an explosion of sea lice, according to a new University of Toronto study. Andrew Nikofurk recently wrote about the spike in the Tyee.
This 2008 video by British Columbia’s Watershed Watch Salmon Society explains how sea lice prey on salmon. Even a small amount of sea lice in fish farms can be devastating to surrounding waters, according to the video.
Sea lice were once never reported on baby salmon. They can be found on adult salmon, which aren’t harmed by the lice. But after humans created fish farms and adults and juvenile fish mingle, the young salmon now contract heavy louse infestations. The lice feed on the skin and flesh of the young fish.
Each female sea louse can carry up to 500 eggs in two strings that look like tails.