Containment Orders Issued for Lake of the Prairies
Saskatchewan’s Ministry of Environment is reporting a detection of invasive mussels in Lake of the Prairies, a shared waterbody between Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
Multiple invasive mussel veligers (the larval stage of the mussel life cycle) were detected in Lake of the Prairies, near Manitoba’s Highway 5 bridge, as part of their routine surveillance monitoring program and corroborated by follow up monitoring efforts between the two provinces.
The Ministry of Environment has launched its AIS Response Management Plan, with response being coordinated through a joint Manitoba-Saskatchewan incident command structure for this shared waterbody. Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) will also be acting in a supporting role. The provinces and DFO are working together to better understand the detection through a coordinated monitoring plan while developing and implementing a multi-jurisdictional containment plan.
In response to the detection, containment orders have been issued for Lake of the Prairies. These orders require all watercraft and equipment that come into contact with Lake of the Prairies to be decontaminated before use at any other waterbody. This order applies from the Highway 357 crossing of the Assiniboine River to the entirety of Lake of the Prairies. Manitoba has also established a containment zone for their portion of Lake of the Prairies, which also carries a requirement for decontamination for any watercraft or equipment leaving Lake of the Prairies prior to use on any other waterbody.


