Five things to know about Canada's lucrative baby eel fishery

Tiny, translucent baby eels called elvers are back in the news after two Mi鈥檏maq men from Nova Scotia reported being detained and dumped by federal fisheries officers far from home at 1 a.m. without footwear or phones after they were caught fishing for them near Shelburne, N.S. A handful of elvers are displayed by a buyer in Portland, Maine, Thursday, March 23, 2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Robert F. Bukaty

HALIFAX - Tiny, translucent baby eels, called elvers, are back in the news after two Mi鈥檏maq men from Nova Scotia reported being detained by federal fisheries officers and then left far from home at 1 a.m. -- without footwear or phones -- after they were caught fishing near Shelburne, N.S.

The federal government closed the lucrative elver fishery on March 11 after violence and intimidation plagued last year's fishing season in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. But many Mi鈥檏maq people maintain they have a treaty right to fish for the baby eels.

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