Signs of early success after pesticide used against invasive species in N.S. lake

Early assessments are indicating positive results nearly a year after a chemical was used against invasive smallmouth bass in an eastern Nova Scotia lake. An aerial view of Dobsons Lake is shown in an undated handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Nova Scotia Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture **MANDATORY CREDIT**

HALIFAX - Nearly one year after Nova Scotia's Fisheries Department treated a lake with chemicals to eradicate invasive smallmouth bass, there are early signs of success.

Last September, the department introduced 1,500 litres of a solution containing the pesticide rotenone into Dobsons Lake, near Canso, N.S. In use since the 1950s, rotenone targets fish gills and inhibits breathing, while leaving birds and mammals unaffected. However, the pesticide will cause all the fish in the treatment area to die.

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