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Winnipeg gets approval to use asphyxiant foam, blood-thinning bait to control ground squirrel population

Winnipeg gets approval to use asphyxiant foam, blood-thinning bait to control ground squirrel population

CBC
Monday, March 16, 2026 07:27:50 AM UTC

The City of Winnipeg has gotten approval to use pesticides animal advocates say are inhumane to control its ground squirrel population.

The province approved use of rodenticide Rozol RTU and asphyxiant foam RoCon at nine parks with athletic fields — some of which have been forced to close down over the past few years due to the effects of ground squirrels, a spokesperson with the city said Sunday.

The spokesperson said the city will begin applying the pesticide in early spring, as the squirrels wake up from hibernation. They said the animals dig holes that destroy athletic fields and greenspaces, and pose a safety hazard for the people who use them.

The approval, which was issued Thursday, comes amid concerns from animal rights advocates who say the products make the squirrels needlessly suffer and are not even an effective pest control.

The Winnipeg Humane Society said in a social media post Friday it was "extremely disappointed" by the decision and will be appealing it.

The society said the method the city plans to use to control the ground squirrel population will lead to "slow and painful deaths for the animals," and could have unintended impacts on other species.

RoCon releases an expanding substance that suffocates the animals. Rozol RTU is a blood thinner that causes the squirrels to die from hemorrhaging.

The city said the treatments are used in most major Prairie cities and pose a limited risk to humans and other animals.

Retired biology professor James Hare said he's "shocked" the Environmental Approvals Branch approved the pest controls, particularly the anticoagulant bait, which he said takes days to kill the animals.

"It ends up causing collateral damage to non-target species," he said.

"Ironically in some sense … it essentially kills many of the predators that normally kill ground squirrels and keep ground squirrels in check. So you know, it kind of defeats the purpose."

Hare said the predators can either eat the bait themselves, or ingest it indirectly by eating squirrel carcasses. Cats and dogs are also killed by ingesting it, he said.

"I certainly understand how you cannot have, you know, Richardson's ground squirrels burrowing into athletic fields that people are running and children are playing on," Hare said. "But by the same token, you should be using more humane methods."

Krista Boryskavich, an animal advocate with the Humane Society, told CBC News that while the province instructed the city to put warning signs in the athletic fields where the pesticide will be used, they might not be enough to ensure pets don't ingest the bait. 

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