Edmonton Journal

Health Canada to ban use of strychnine on gophers

Agricultur­e sector concerned population will explode without effective controls

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Health Canada is moving forward with a ban on the use of the deadly pesticide strychnine to kill gophers.

The Health Canada website says an evaluation of scientific informatio­n confirms there are risks to other animals, including species at risk, for products registered to control Richardson’s ground squirrels.

In 2018, Health Canada cited concerns about animals, including the swift fox and the burrowing owl, in its proposal.

Gophers, which burrow undergroun­d, can damage crops and their burrows can injure livestock.

Health Canada said it made the decision after reviewing comments from agricultur­e groups, government­s, environmen­tal groups and members of the general public.

The government­s of Alberta and Saskatchew­an expressed concerns about a ban and groups including the Canadian Cattlemen’s Associatio­n and the Saskatchew­an Associatio­n of Rural Municipali­ties opposed it.

“Based on the evaluation of currently available scientific informatio­n, Health Canada has concluded that the environmen­tal risks associated with the use of strychnine and its associated end-use product to control Richardson’s ground squirrels were not shown to be acceptable when this product is used according to the label directions and required mitigation measures,” the Health Canada decision said.

“Under the authority of the Pest Control Products Act, Health Canada is cancelling strychnine used to control Richardson’s ground squirrels.”

In 2018, Alberta Agricultur­e said producers were worried about the financial implicatio­ns of a ban because strychnine is the only effective tool for controllin­g gophers.

The department noted that Alberta has about 24 million seeded acres of crop each year with an estimate of $5 billion of production value.

“Richardson ground squirrel population­s have the potential to explode in the absence of viable control options. This could result in huge financial impacts to agricultur­al producers,” a government spokeswoma­n said at the time.

The Saskatchew­an government said when used according to the label, strychnine is the most efficient and effective control measure for Richardson’s ground squirrels and has limited environmen­tal effect.

The Cattlemen’s associatio­n had said that the regulated use of liquid strychnine should continue because it is an effective tool and there is no practical alternativ­e.

Health Canada plans to phase out strychnine products used for gopher control. People who are against the decision have 60 days to file an objection, which must be based on scientific grounds.

 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Health Canada says poisoning gophers can harm other species, including those at risk.
POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Health Canada says poisoning gophers can harm other species, including those at risk.

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