The first thing is that all the questions you've asked me previously were to do with the Norwegian strain of PRV and Norwegian strains of Atlantic salmon. Now we're switching over to tests that I've done with the B.C. strain of PRV and both juvenile Atlantic salmon and juvenile sockeye salmon.
In those tests, we infect them and then we follow them for many weeks post-infection. As part of the testing, we chase the fish to exhaustion. This would take a period of 10 minutes. If any of the committee members were to do a stress challenge test in a cardiologist's lab, you'd jump on a treadmill and my guess is you'd probably last no more than six minutes before you'd have to tell the guy to stop increasing the plane.
Yes, we stress the fish and we challenge its cardio-respiratory system, but we do not do the classic swim test that Dr. Roly Brett pioneered for swimming salmon in treadmills and that we've used for many other things.