Study finds high DDT levels in fish 60 years after pesticide was used

The discovery in brook trout in New Brunswick is raising concerns about wildlife that eat the fish, which have absorbed DDT that has lingered in the environment and washed into waterways over decades.

April 23, 2025

An osprey with its wings outstretched, carrying a trout in its talons above a lake
The discovery of high DDT levels in brook trout in New Brunswick is raising concerns about wildlife that eat the fish. The trout absorb the pesticide that has lingered in the environment for six decades and washed into waterways. (Adobe image)

Expert Featured In This Story

Karen Kidd
Karen Kidd

Professor

See Profile

A team of biologists has found that DDT levels in fish are ten times higher than what ecological guidelines recommend, decades after it was last used.

Researchers detected high concentrations of the pesticide in brook trout throughout New Brunswick, raising concerns about the impacts on fish-eating wildlife.

The study, published this week in the journal PLOS One, highlights the pollution legacy of one of North America’s largest aerial spray programs of insecticides.

Between the 1950s and 1960s, prior being banned, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) was used to control insect populations in forests, farmlands and urban areas. Commonly sprayed over forests by airplane, DDT has lingered in the environment for decades, gradually washing into lakes from surrounding land. Fish absorb DDT through the food they eat.

square headshot of Karen Kidd
Karen Kidd

“We have learned many tough lessons from the heavy use of DDT in agriculture and forestry in North America,” says McMaster University professor and study co-author Karen Kidd, the Stephen A. Jarislowsky Chair in Environment and Health.

“The biggest one is that this pesticide was concentrated through food webs to levels that caused widespread raptor declines for decades, starting in the 1960s.”

“Pesticides like DDT are boomerangs, they keep cycling and posing risks in our environment long after we originally threw them there.”

The researchers examined brook trout from New Brunswick lakes where DDT was heavily used and compared results to lakes where DDT was never used. Combining evidence from fish, sediments and invertebrates, as well as publicly available data on where, when, and how much DDT was applied, provides a very powerful approach to studying pollution from decades ago.

“Despite half a century after DDT was last used, environmental problems caused by DDT remain today’s problems, as Rachel Carson warned long ago in Silent Spring”, says lead author Josh Kurek, associate professor of Environmental Science at Mount Allison University.

“New Brunswick is known as the Picture Province in Canada, but what we discovered in fish and lake mud is not a pretty picture.”

Researchers say the findings confirm legacy DDTs are very high in brook trout – above levels where harmful effects may occur for fish-eating wildlife. Brook trout are the most common fish targeted and consumed by anglers in the province.

Funding was provided by Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and New Brunswick Wildlife Trust Fund.

The front of an electric bus, plugged in to charge.

Canada could affordably electrify every transit bus fleet in the country, study shows

Fully electric bus fleets across Canadian transit systems are not only affordable and possible, they would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by more than 92 per cent, the study shows.
Two women sit at a table, with papers on the table in front of them. Two men and another woman stand behind them.

McMaster joins nuclear not-for-profit Conexus

McMaster is the first academic institution to join as part of the organization’s new Research Reactor Membership category.
A collage of eight close-up photos of birds.

Bird observatory taking flight at McMaster Forest Nature Preserve

With help from Planetary Health Seed Fund, McMaster's observatory will join a network across North America monitoring migratory birds.