In contrast to what I was describing in British Columbia, we have a situation in New Brunswick where we think there is tolerance to SLICE. We think there is tolerance to SLICE. We are still in the process of collecting more data from the industry. We're doing some analyses of the data. We'll come forward in due course. The industry is absolutely convinced there's tolerance to SLICE. It's probably the case, but certainly from a definitive scientific perspective, at least from DFO's vantage point, it has not been determined.
Having said that, it's fairly clear that the application of SLICE in New Brunswick is not achieving the desired results. Unfortunately, from the perspective of New Brunswick, they've had record-high water temperatures in the last eight months in the Bay of Fundy. Sea lice are very dependent on temperature. They will respond to higher temperatures, grow quickly, and so on. Lice populations and levels are increasing in New Brunswick.
The Government of New Brunswick, in collaboration with the industry, applied to the Pest Management Regulatory Agency for the authority to use two pesticides, not medications. One is called AlfaMax and the other one is called Salmosan. Those are applied in farms. They tarp and skirt the farms and apply the pesticide into that. It's a topical treatment. It kills the lice on contact, as opposed to through the salmon's flesh.
In addition, they're looking at alternate treatments through feed, in particular a chemical called Calicide. There's also another treatment mechanism where you remove the fish from the cage, run them through a well boat, apply hydrogen peroxide to kill the lice, and knock them off, and so on.
The industry currently has approval to use the pesticide called Salmosan. It's actually being applied in the water today. They started another round of treatments. The department is very aware of that and is working to build an appropriate regulatory regime that would allow a rotational set of treatments, whether they're on the pesticide side or the drug side of the treatment regime, so to speak.