To identify the virus, the Columbia University investigators used 454 high throughput DNA sequencing and bioinformatics, including a new tool called Frequency Analysis of Sequence Data FASD, pioneered by Raul Rabadan of Columbias Department of Biomedical Informatics. Investigators in Norway and the U.S. then looked for viral sequences in heart and kidney samples from 29 salmon representing three different HSMI outbreaks and 10 samples from healthy farmed fish. Twenty eight of the 29 96.5% known HSMI samples and none of the 10 healthy salmon samples were positive. The investigators also tested 66 samples obtained from wild salmon living in nine coastal rivers in Norway. The virus was detected in sixteen of these samples 24.2%, though generally in lower concentrations than found in ailing farmed fish.I was amazed! I asked him, What do you attribute your success to? How did you get so much business?Grab A Copy Click here.
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