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WWF report highlights mountain caribou’s plight
Letter to the Editor
World Wildlife Fundās recent Living Planet Index report highlights sobering statistics on the decline of wildlife species in Canada.
Of over 900 species surveyed, half are showing significant population declines. This includes large declines of federally-designated Species at Risk like mountain caribou, who have disappeared from much of their historic range in B.C.ās interior mountains over the past decades.
The WWF report concludes that the failure to protect wildlife species is a problem from coast-to-coast-to-coast. Even species recognized under Canadaās Species at Risk Act suffer delays of many years, even decades, before action plans to protect them are written and implemented. The federal government failed over the past 15 years to protect sufficient critical habitat for mountain caribou while populations dwindled and entire herds disappearedāand is only now about to announce long-awaited actions to protect them.
According to the WWF report, habitat loss is the greatest threat to species across Canada. Mountain caribou have already lost a great amount of their old-growth forest habitat to logging and other industrial development, while grassland birds have suffered a 69% decline due to both loss of habitat and pesticide use. With so much critical wildlife habitat already gone, we canāt afford to wait any longer to protect whatās left.
A better network of protected areas, one of the recommendations of the report, is sorely needed to give our threatened species and ecosystems a fighting chance. For many species, especially larger mammals like mountain caribou, grizzly bears and wolverines, protected areas linked by connectivity corridors are increasingly important on our fragmented landscapes.
Climate change, another key threat in the WWF report, multiplies the impactsāparticularly on species like mountain caribou that depend on deep winter snow-packs. Connectivity is crucial for many species to allow them to move with changes to climate, vegetation and food sources. Our interior mountain ecosystems are internationally recognized as providing some of the best remaining climate refugia for North American wildlife as climate change accelerates. For wildlife, having suitable available habitat is key.
If we want wildlife in our future, we must start managing our land and water with wildlife and ecosystems as our top priority. With so many important species in decline, we donāt have any time to waste.
John Bergenske,
Conservation Director, Wildsight