A plan to use a pesticide to get rid of invasive smallmouth bass in New Brunswick’s Miramichi watershed will move ahead this summer, according to the group mounting the operation.
Neville Crabbe, spokesman for the Working Group on Smallmouth Bass Eradication in the Miramichi, said it has until the end of September to carry out its work, which will involve the use of the chemical rotenone to kill the fish. Rotenone targets fish gills and inhibits their breathing while leaving birds and mammals unaffected.
Crabbe said measures have been taken to protect as many non-invasive fish as possible, including the erection of barriers and the removal of fish to other areas, where possible.
Crabbe, who is also director of communications for the Atlantic Salmon Federation, said his group’s motivation is ecosystem preservation.
“The (area’s) future will depend on the outcome of this project,” Crabbe said in an interview Monday. “We are either looking at a future with a quickly spreading invasive species, or one where we are able to restore the native ecosystem.”
Smallmouth bass, which were first detected in the Miramichi watershed in 2008, can alter ecosystems by preying on native species of fish such as Atlantic salmon and brook trout.
The working group, which is composed of Indigenous and non-governmental organizations such as the Atlantic Salmon Federation, put its operation on hold last September after protesters refused to leave the areas around Miramichi Lake, Lake Brook and part of the Southwest Miramichi River.
Crabbe said since the project was halted last fall, the working group has held five community meetings and “countless other meetings” in an attempt to assuage fears and educate about the chemical’s use.
He didn’t give specific dates for the operation but said 24 hours’ notice will be given through signs posted in the area. Rotenone will be either sprayed or introduced directly into the water, and people will be asked to stay away from those areas while the operation is underway.
“The vast majority of the rotenone isn’t actually sprayed. Most of it is delivered underneath the surface of the water, or through drip cans set up on rocks,” he said.
Crabbe added that in this instance, the chemical, which has been in use since the 1950s, will be used in amounts below the threshold set by Health Canada for safe recreational use.
In a statement issued Monday, Natoaganeg First Nation Chief George Ginnish, on behalf of the North Shore Micmac District Council, which represents seven Mi’kmaq communities, pointed out that the eradication project is “Indigenous-led conservation.”
“Some people don’t know this, some people ignore it,” said Ginnish. “This is a localized, short-term impact for the benefit of the entire 13,500-square-kilometre watershed. If we felt otherwise, we would not be leading it.”
The chief said further delay could guarantee the establishment of smallmouth bass outside of the project area.
“We are committed to completing this critical conservation project,” Ginnish said. The North Shore Micmac District Council is a member of the eradication working group.
Rotenone was recently used by the Nova Scotia government to combat the introduction of smallmouth bass at Piper Lake in Pictou County. The move was supported by a number of conservation groups and the Halifax-based Ecology Action Centre.
Raymond Plourde, the action centre’s senior wilderness co-ordinator, said while his organization does not support the use of chemicals in the environment as a general principle, the battle against invasive fish species can be an exception.
“Serious situations call for, in some cases, a serious response,” Plourde said. “The use of rotenone is not ideal, but it is far better than letting them (smallmouth bass) spread throughout the system and completely and forever changing the species composition.”
Our Morning Update and Evening Update newsletters are written by Globe editors, giving you a concise summary of the day’s most important headlines. Sign up today.