Island university fish farm closes after accident kills hundreds of trout 
By Adam van der Zwan CA Source: CBC News 1/8/2020
Adam van der Zwan
Vancouver Island University's fisheries facility is being temporarily decommissioned after an incident just before Christmas killed 377 trout being used for teaching and research.

"It was an accident that happened overnight in mid-December," said Nicole Vaugeois, the associate vice-president of research at the university in Nanaimo.

A statement says the deaths were caused by a series of "mechanical and human" errors.

"I can't go into too many details out of respect for the privacy of our students and employees," said Vaugeois.
 

The school's Fisheries and Aquaculture Technology program aims to teach students how to conserve and manage aquatic life in both laboratory and field settings. Vaugeois said around 60 full-time students work with trained technicians to care for nearly 2,000 fish every year.

Jessica Hopkins, a former fisheries student at VIU, said in a message that the trout farm is "run by students." She noted the water in the trout tanks is first filtered by the school's hydroponic farm and is then fed from the trout farm into a shellfish farm.

1,500 trout relocated

Due to a longstanding mutual aid agreement between the school and the federal Pacific Biological Station in Nanaimo, school staff spent two days transporting the remaining 1,500 trout from the facility to the station, where they'll be held for up to six months.

Vaugeois said the coordinated move was "our chance to rectify deficiencies in the facilities and training that were identified as a result of this incident."

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
2476Okanagan First Nation fishery celebrates record return of sockeye salmonmsn2022-09-04CA
2477AI-enabled fish gate filters invasive salmon out of Norwegian waterwaysnewatlas2022-08-26NO
2478Poles hold “marches of mourning” for poisoned Oder river while anglers mobilise to save fishnotesfrompoland2022-08-23PL
2479One of the World’s Rarest Fish Swims Upside Down While Huntingfieldandstream2022-08-25DM
2480US army builds electric barrier of death to stop rampaging fish destroying Great Lakesdailystar2022-08-26US
2481A pair of crocodile gars in Ruzhou, Henan, watched by millions of netizens for nearly a monthbreakinglatest2022-08-27CN
2482Dead fish and depression on the banks of Poland’s Oder RiverAFP2022-08-27PL
2483Novel tech helps detect roundworms in fish filletsThe Fish Site2022-09-03US
2484Turning invasive copi into live feed for yellow perchThe Fish Site2022-09-01US
2485China delivers world's first 100,000-tonne 'mobile fish farm'cgtn2022-05-20CN
2486How new ocean buoys improve fish farming in S. China's Quanzhoucgtn2022-08-14CN
2487Fish chock-full of natural 'antifreeze' protein found in iceberg off Greenlandthenationalnews2022-08-16US
2488Hundreds of fish killed when Upstate lake accidentally drainedcounton22022-08-16US
2489Why expert predicts mass fish kills will increase across Australia9news2022-08-18AU
2490Fuel leaks into Little Paddle River after bridge collapses near MayerthorpeGlobal News2020-05-12CA
2491Atlantic hagfish: A slimy ‘nightmare’ of a fish that feeds on the deadsea coast online2022-08-18US
2492Dutch anglers save fish as Rhine drought bitesglobal times2022-08-18NL
2493Second court challenge to kill fish in Miramichi LakeCBC News2022-08-18CA
2494This monster Idaho fish was more than just a record. It was an unexpected speciesidahostatesman2022-08-19US
2495На реку за окунямиОхотники.ру2022-08-31RU
2496Dead Fish in San Francisco Bay Area Blamed on Toxic Red TideAssociated Press2022-08-31US
2497Investing in the genetics of Scotland's trout sectorThe Fish Site2022-08-31UK
2498Climate-Endangered Arctic Epishelf Lake Harbors Viral Assemblages with Distinct Genetic Repertoiresjournals.asm.org2022-08-25CA
2499Arkansas Game and Fish reports two giant catfish caught in Lake Conwayarktimes2022-08-15US
2500Teenage vandals cause major damage, attempt to poison koi fish at Salt Lake Cactus & TropicalsFox News2022-08-14US

215 216 217 99 of [218 - pages.]