Biologists in
the U.S.
are questioning whether rat poison used on illegal marijuana farms is
inadvertently killing a vulnerable forest predator, one that is also a species
of concern in B.C.
The fisher, a
small weasel-like forest animal, is currently being considered for the
endangered species list in the states of Washington, Oregon and California —
and biologists are considering the role that outlaw marijuana plantations may
have in its decline.
Mourad
Gabriel, a researcher based at UC Davis, says the animal is normally a fierce
predator but appears defenceless in the face of rat poison.
The toxin was
found in 80 per cent of a sample of 58 dead fishers in Northern
California .
"We're
finding lots of chemicals out there. We're finding also banned chemicals that
have been banned by Canada , United States
and other nations because of the high toxicity to humans and wildlife,"
Gabriel said.
Gabriel
suspects most of the fishers consumed the rat poison through the bodies of its
prey, but some ate it directly, he said.
As other
researchers have also found, Gabriel says the likely culprit is marijuana
farmers using rat poison to protect their valuable crops.
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