Deaths caused by poisoning jumps
more than 200 percent
Date: November 4, 2015
Source: USDA Forest Service - Pacific Southwest
Research Station
The relatively rare,
forest-dwelling fisher is increasingly becoming the innocent victim of illegal
marijuana farms in forested lands in California. According to a recently
published study in the journal PLOS One, researchers found that the annual
rate of poisoning deaths of fishers (Pekania pennant) rose 233 percent compared
to a study in 2012. The toxicants were discovered to be associated with illegal
marijuana farms on public and tribal lands in Northern and Southern California.
Previous studies showed that rat
poisons were being found in the tissues of this cat-sized relative of the
weasel family when they were in proximity of illegal marijuana cultivation
sites in rugged portions of Northern California and the southern Sierra Nevada.
This new study examined the deaths of 167 fishers -- 129 of which cause of
death was determined -- and revealed that:
Northern California fishers were
five times more likely to die from poisoning than predation compared to fishers
in the southern Sierra Nevada;
Overall, male fishers were 13
times more likely to die of poisoning than predation compared to females. This
is potentially due to the large movements made by male fishers during the
spring breeding season, when growers' use of rodenticides peaks;
Eight-five percent of fishers
showed exposure to rat poison, and fishers were, on average, exposed to
multiple types of poison;
Poisoning accounted for 10
percent of all documented fisher mortalities;
New, never-before seen
rodenticides -- cholecalciferol and bromethalin -- were the cause of death in
two cases.
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