Cc. Coutant, WHAT IS NORMATIVE FOR FISH PATHOGENS - A PERSPECTIVE ON THE CONTROVERSY OVER INTERACTIONS BETWEEN WILD AND CULTURED FISH, Journal of aquatic animal health, 10(2), 1998, pp. 101-106
In its report, Return to the River, the Independent Scientific Group (
now called the Independent Scientific Advisory Board-the scientific pe
er review arm of the Northwest Power Planning Council) advanced the no
tion of a ''normative river ecosystem'' as a new conceptual foundation
for salmonid recovery in the Columbia River basin. With this perspect
ive, the sum of the best scientific understanding of how organisms and
aquatic ecosystems naturally function should be the norm or standard
of measure for how we judge the effects of human activities on aquatic
systems. For the best likelihood of recovery, key aspects of altered
systems should be brought back toward normative (although not necessar
ily fully back to the historical or pristine state); new alterations s
hould be judged by how much they move key functions away from normativ
e or what might be considered as normal. In this paper, I ask what ''n
ormative'' is for fish pathogens and how this concept could help resol
ve the long-standing disputes between fish culturists and advocates of
wild fish in fisheries management. Through literature review and para
llels with the evolution of infectious diseases in human populations,
I suggest that the concept can be useful for understanding and control
ling pathogens and diseases of fish in aquatic ecosystems. One key to
avoiding disease outbreaks appears to be maintenance of normal diversi
ty in fish pathogens, intermediate hosts, and immunological types in f
ish. I encourage further exploration of the normative perspective as a
guide to our research and evaluations of pathogens and diseases cf fi
sh.