Nearly 60 Years After It Was Discontinued, DDT Found In New Brunswick Trout At 10X Safety Threshold [View all]
Residues of the insecticide DDT have been found to persist at alarming rates in trout even after 70 years, potentially posing a significant danger to humans and wildlife that eat the fish, research has found. Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, known as DDT, was used on forested land in New Brunswick, Canada, from 1952 to 1968. The researchers found traces of it remained in brook trout in some lakes, often at levels 10 times higher than the recommended safety threshold for wildlife.
DDT is a probable carcinogen that we havent used in 70 years here [Canada], yet its abundant in fish and lake mud throughout much of the province at shockingly high levels, said Josh Kurek, an associate professor in environmental change and aquatic biomonitoring at Mount Allison University in Canada and lead author of the research.
The research, published in the journal Plos One, discovered that DDT pollution covers about 50% of New Brunswick province. Brook trout is the most common wild fish caught in the region, and the research found DDT was present in its muscle tissue, in some cases 10 times above the recommended Canadian wildlife guidelines.
Researchers said DDT, which is classified by health authorities as aprobable carcinogen, can persist in lake mud for decades after treatment and that many lakes in New Brunswick retain such high levels of legacy DDT that the sediments are a key source of pollution in the food web.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/apr/21/banned-ddt-discovered-in-canadian-trout-70-years-after-use-research-finds