The suspicions were confirmed, and by the end of the year, the disease had spread to an additional fifteen farms not only on the Scottish mainland but also on Skye and Shetland.
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By June 1988 it had become sufficiently widespread and serious to require the Norwegian Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food to declare it a notifiable disease.
virus | salmon | Salmon P. Chase | West Nile virus | Salmon | anemia | salmon run | RNA virus | Herpes simplex virus | computer virus | Chum salmon | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases | Human T-lymphotropic virus | Computer virus | Coho salmon | Chinook salmon | Virus | Thomas M. Salmon | Sockeye salmon | Salmon Fishing in the Yemen | Salmon Arm | John Salmon Ford | Influenza A virus subtype H1N1 | Herpes Simplex Virus | Ebola virus | aplastic anemia | Virus Buster Serge | Vesicular stomatitis virus | varicella zoster virus | Uganda Virus Research Institute |