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Banff National Park officials begin fish cull in Johnson Lake

Using netting and electro-fishing, Parks Canada officials began eradicating fish from Johnson Lake near Banff this week in an effort to stop whirling disease from spreading to other bodies of water.

Fish being removed from the lake to stop whirling disease from reaching other bodies of water

Watch Parks Canada use electro-fishing techniques in Johnson Lake

7 years ago
Duration 0:40
Officials are trying to stop whirling disease from spreading to other bodies of water.

Using netting and electro-fishing, Parks Canada officials began eradicating fish from Johnson Lake near Banff this week in an effort to stop whirling disease from spreading to other bodies of water.

Electro-fishing is a non-lethal way of capturing fish, usually used for doing counts.

"Basically it's a backpack unit, you walk through a stream or a shallow portion of a lake," said Mark Taylor, an aquatic ecologist with Banff National Park.

"You've got an anode and a cathode in the water and you're creating an electric current around you. That electric current gives way to a very predictable behaviour in fish, where they're stunned so they come up to the surface, and often times they swim toward the electro-fisher."

Nets are then used to scoop up the stunned fish, then they will be killed.

Because they could be contaminated, they will be disposed of in an approved landfill.

A brown spotted fish swims in a white basin, surrounded by sediment.
The fish were collected using electro-fishing and nets, then they will be destroyed. (Tiphanie Roquette/CBC)

Johnson Lake was the site of the first confirmed case of whirling disease in Canada, which was discovered last August but the disease has since been detected in the entire Bow River and watershed and the Oldman River basin in Alberta.

Whirling disease is a parasite which affects salmon, trout, char and whitefish and causes them to swim in a whirling pattern until they die. Johnson Lake was stocked with brook and lake trout decades ago.

The goal of the eradication is to protect other bodies of water, namely the nearby Two Jack Lake Reservoir and Minnewanka Lake Reservoir, which are currently free of whirling disease.

"One of the streams that drains into the Minnewanka Reservoir is called the Upper Cascade, and it's home to several core populations of westslope cutthroat trout, they're listed as threatened," said resource conservation manager Bill Hunt.

Officials use nets to remove fish from Johnson Lake to protect the area from whirling disease. (Tiphanie Roquette/CBC)

To better protect those fish populations, access to Two Jack and Minnewanka was closed when whirling disease was detected.

The disease is not harmful to humans and the CFIA said there are no health concerns for people using the infected bodies of water or eating infected fish.

With files from Tiphanie Roquette/CBC