Balaclavas, hidden licence plates and midnight violence — why Nova Scotia's baby eel fishery was shut down

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Hubbards, N.S., resident Ann Gagnon witnessed a fishery gone wrong — up close — and it left her shaken.

“There was men with hooded balaclavas and licence plates covered up. That’s when we called 911 and the RCMP,” she recalled of the first night the poachers appeared in late March.

They were after tiny and translucent baby eels, also called elvers or glass eels, on the annual spring migration from the ocean into Maritime rivers.

Elvers are Canada’s most valuable fish species by weight, selling for up to $5,000 a kilogram and shipped live to Asia where they are grown for food.

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“It’s a little

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Reading: Balaclavas, hidden licence plates and midnight violence — why Nova Scotia's baby eel fishery was shut down

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