Row wavy Shape Decorative svg added to bottom

News

green wave

Darnley Basin is 5th P.E.I. waterway to test positive for oyster disease, says CFIA

This article was written by Stephen Brun and originally published by CBC News on August 13, 2024 at 7:13PM ADT. We are sharing the full text here for reference. All rights remain with the original publisher.

Presumptive positive test result for MSX also found in Percival River

Oysters sitting on a blue track with the ocean in the background and cages on top.
Primary control zones have been put in place in five P.E.I. waterways to date. (Julien Lecacheur/Radio-Canada)

Another waterway on Prince Edward Island has now tested positive for the presence of a disease that affects oysters, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency says.

In an interview with CBC’s Steve Bruce on Tuesday, the CFIA’s incident commander Kathy Brewer-Dalton said a primary control zone has been put in place in Darnley Basin, on P.E.I.’s North Shore.

It’s the fifth area on the Island to yield positive test results for the presence multinuclear sphere X, or MSX, in the past six weeks.

Brewer-Dalton said one other river near Alaska, in western P.E.I., has also returned a presumptive positive test result for MSX that will need to be confirmed through DNA sequencing in the coming days.

“We do have presumptive positives in the Percival River area, so those have been sent off for sequencing and we’re awaiting those results,” she said. “So depending on the results of that sequencing there may be an additional PCZ, or primary control zone, put in place.”

MSX was first detected in Bedeque Bay on July 11, but it has since been confirmed in several areas throughout the province.

While harmless to humans, MSX can cause mortality of 80 to 90 per cent when it strikes a new population of oysters.

The CFIA puts primary control zones in place to control the movement of oysters and equipment in and out of the affected areas. Oysters can still be harvested and sent to market with a permit from the agency.

The disease comes with a lot of uncertainty for P.E.I.’s multimillion-dollar oyster industry.

MSX wiped out oyster stocks in Chesapeake Bay, between Maryland and Delaware, in the 1950s. It had never been spotted north of Maine until 2002 when it was detected in Cape Breton — where it has affected the industry ever since.

Row of oyster cages are lines up in the dark blue water. The light blue sky has some wispy clouds.
The parasite can stunt the growth of oysters and kill many of them. (Julien Lecacheur/Radio-Canada)

“I cannot say enough about the industry members — the wild harvesters, the aquaculture producers and the processors. They have been committed to this response right off the get-go with the CFIA and that  has made a huge difference in the strides that we’ve made over the last six weeks, so I really want to give them a lot of credit,” Brewer-Dalton said.

She said the CFIA has issued around 120 permits for the movement of oysters to and from primary control zones to date.

Tusday, the federal government announced it would contribute up to $1 million over the next two years to “to support scientific research towards addressing knowledge gaps in our understanding of MSX.”

Ottawa also announced that a science summit will happen this fall, which will gather experts and partners to discuss what is known about the disease, as well as identify priority areas for additional research.

Going forward, the agency will complete sampling and testing from P.E.I. waterways to determine the extent of the infection in the province. Depending on the results, the primary control zones could remain, or the CFIA may declare “infected zones,” similar to what’s currently in place in Cape Breton.

Brewer-Dalton understands that people who rely on the oysters for their livelihood are hungry for answers, but assured the industry that the CFIA has regional and national crisis teams dedicated solely to the MSX issue.

“Once we get through the sampling and understand the extent of the infection, then we’re on to the next step to say OK, now that we know where the infection is, where do we go from here? How do we manage this disease from the ground, how do we manage within it?”

Source: CBC News. Original article available here.

Recent News

RPC Becomes First in the World to Sequence the MSX Genome, Opening New Pathways for Oyster Health and Industry Resilience

This article was  originally published by RPC  on February 19, 2026. We are sharing the full text here for reference.…

Survey suggest P.E.I.’s oyster farmers struggling, worried about debt

This article was originally published by CBC News on Jan 29, 2026. We are sharing the full text here for…

Federal help coming for P.E.I. oyster fishery, with buyback program in the works, MP says

This article was written by Thinh Nguyen and originally published by CBC News on Dec 23, 2025 1:48 PM AST.…

P.E.I. offers oyster fishers retraining subsidies, but many want to stay in the industry

This article was written by Nancy Russell and originally published by CBC News on Nov 20, 2025 6:00 AM AST.…

P.E.I. spending $1.3M on new programs to support oyster fishers affected by MSX, Dermo

This article was written by Haeley DiRisio and originally published by CTV News on November 19, 2025 at 10:31AM EST.…

Exploring the resiliency of P.E.I. eastern oysters amid MSX

This article was written by Yutaro Sasaki  and originally published by The Guardian on Nov 19, 2025. We are sharing the…

P.E.I. fisheries minister says support is coming to help oyster industry overcome MSX, dermo

This article was written by Brittany Spencer and originally published by CBC News on Nov 19, 2025 6:00 AM AST.…

P.E.I. company seeks approval to import disease-resistant oyster stock from the U.S.

This article was written by Ryan McKellop and originally published by CBC News on Nov 12, 2025 6:00 AM AST.…

Oysters under threat

This article was written by Elizabeth McMillan and originally published by CBC News on October 19, 2025. We are sharing…

P.E.I. government calls on Ottawa for cash support as oyster diseases impact industry

This article was written by Thinh Nguyen and originally published by CBC News on Oct 17, 2025 6:00 PM ADT.…