endangered species

Canadian wildlife need big connected parks or species will disappear

Manitoba Moose and Bats in trouble
July 19, 2010

The health of wildlife and biodiversity is uneven in Canada’s national and provincial parks, says a new report prepared by the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS).

In some cases species are at risk of dying out and biodiversity is faltering because habitat has not been adequately protected. In others, good progress has been made to protect wildlife.

The review “How is Wildlife faring in Canada’s Parks?” makes the case that parks are a cornerstone of Canada’s efforts to protect biodiversity – the variety of flora and fauna that make up an ecosystem. However, it notes that bigger, better managed parks, and more of them, are needed if parks are to fulfill their critical role in protecting Canada’s wildlife.

CPAWS prepared its third annual review of parks to mark Canada Parks Day, July 17. The organization focused on biodiversity this year because the United Nations has declared 2010 the International Year of Biodiversity.

“Strengthening our parks system is a key component in protecting out treasured wildlife,” says Ron Thiessen, Executive Director of CPAWS Manitoba.

Large parks protect species

There are 500 species in Canada at risk of extinction and more at-risk species are identified every year.

“Canada has one of the best opportunities in the world to create large parks that protect species that need vast wilderness to survive,” said Thiessen.

CPAWS prescribes a range of measures, including:

  • Creating new parks and expanding existing park boundaries;
  • Maintaining and restoring wildlife movement corridors (so that wildlife have the large ranges they often need);
  • Restricting roads and other damaging developments;
  • Limiting recreational activities; and
  • Practicing good park management focused on healthy ecosystems as a first priority.

Species struggle without adequate parks, good management

Among the good news stories highlighted in the report, where parks help protect vulnerable species, are the Ipswich savannah sparrow of Sable Island, the black dogfish of the Laurentian Channel of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and the eastern wolf of Algonquin Park.

In Manitoba, moose need help in Nopiming provincial park. A moose hunting ban was recently put in place but a comprehensive plan needs to be designed to ensure their healthy future.

Little brown bats in Manitoba are in trouble and require habitat protection. The proposed Fisher Bay provincial park on the south basin of Lake Winnipeg set to be established this October could be a big part of the solution. At issue are the boundaries for the upcoming park. The concern is that politics may trump sound ecological-based boundaries.

“The International Year of Biodiversity is a good reminder that we need to focus on establishing new parks and properly managing existing parks to ensure our wildlife remains a healthy part of Canada’s landscape,” Thiessen asserted.

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Contact :

Ron Thiessen
Executive Director
CPAWS Manitoba
(204) 794 4971
ron@cpawsmb.org

Download the report

The health of wildlife and biodiversity is uneven in Canada’s national and provincial parks, says a new report prepared by the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS).

In some cases species are at risk of dying out and biodiversity is faltering because habitat has not been adequately protected. In others, good progress has been made to protect wildlife.


Group fears for moose, bats at Nopiming and Fisher Bay

Mia Rabson
July 10, 2010

OTTAWA -- The plummeting moose population in Nopiming Provincial Park demonstrates the animals need more space if they are going to survive, the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society said Friday.

In its 2010 Review of Canada's Parks, the organization calls for more and bigger parks across the country that are connected to provide wildlife with improved mobility and migratory paths.

"In the old days, we used to draw boundaries for parks based on political decisions, not ecological need," said CPAWS Manitoba executive director Ron Thiessen. "But the lack of parks, protected areas, and connections between them has led to a massive decline in species across Canada."

Thiessen noted the fact Riding Mountain National Park and Duck Mountain Provincial Park are not connected via protected land cuts off wildlife species like elk and wolves from their traditional migratory routes.

Instead of swaths of protected land connecting with each other from coast to coast, Canada's parks are "small islands of nature in developed landscapes," the report says.

The report singles out the Nopiming moose and little brown bats near Fisher Bay on Lake Winnipeg as two species that are either at risk or could be if there is not significant intervention in Manitoba.

Since 2000, the estimated number of moose in Nopiming has plummeted from 1,800 to just 700.

Increased access for hunting due to an influx of logging roads and a rise in predators such as coyotes and wolves are quickly killing off the moose.

"More than a 60 per cent decline in the last decade is very dramatic and we're seeing those declines across the province," Thiessen said.

Jack Dubois, director of the wildlife and ecosystem protection branch of Manitoba Conservation, said on the opposite side of the province in Duck Mountain, the moose population is down nearly 60 per cent since 1993. As of February, there were 1,349 moose counted in the park.

Dubois said the Manitoba government is embarking on a consultation process with "everyone interested in moose" in the province.

"We're hoping by this winter we'll have a draft moose management strategy," he said. "We want to stop the rate of decline as soon as we can."

Manitoba has already put a moratorium on moose hunting in both Nopiming and Duck Mountain, something CPAWS credited as a good move.

But Dubois said there isn't a focus in Manitoba on connecting parks to one another. The emphasis is rather on identifying rare or unique species or geological features and protecting them first.

The next provincial park will likely be Fisher Bay on the south shore of Lake Winnipeg, but there's debate over the boundaries of that proposed preserve.

The report notes Fisher Bay is home to the largest bat hibernation spot in the province, in a system of limestone caves. Little brown bats are numerous there -- one cave alone reportedly has 25,000 -- but without proper protection, they would be in trouble, Thiessen said.

CPAWS wants the park to be 160,000 hectares, but the province currently has 89,000 hectares protected and the protected status of that area runs out in October.

"We're waiting to see if good ecological sense will prevail over political concerns," Thiessen said.

He said mining and logging operators have a stake in the land outside the current protected zone and are likely lobbying the province not to close those lands off.

Dubois said there is no reason to believe the bats will be put in jeopardy, noting their habitat is within the area with the highest level of protection. He said negotiations on the boundaries are moving ahead in good faith with all involved.

mia.rabson@freepress.mb.ca

Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition July 10, 2010 A3

OTTAWA -- The plummeting moose population in Nopiming Provincial Park demonstrates the animals need more space if they are going to survive, the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society said Friday.

In its 2010 Review of Canada's Parks, the organization calls for more and bigger parks across the country that are connected to provide wildlife with improved mobility and migratory paths.


Time to get serious about songbirds

SILVER DONALD CAMERON
May 10, 2010

In the frosty pre-dawn darkness, Bridget Stutchbury is slipping stealthily through the Pennsylvania woodlands, occasionally flashing a light to illuminate a landmark.

She is trailing a philanderer, hoping to catch the hussy in the act. For two hours she tracks her target by sound and radio — and she fails. The floozy demonstrates perfect chastity.

The philanderer is not a woman, but a bird, a female Acadian flycatcher, and Stutchbury is not a private eye, but an ornithologist who studies the social life of songbirds, including their sex lives.

This is not leering voyeurism. Songbird populations are falling steeply and to reverse the decline we need to understand not only the reasons for their decline but also their requirements for successful reproduction.

Stutchbury, a professor at York University in Toronto, actually calls herself a "behavioural ecologist" or, more colloquially, a "bird detective."

That’s also the title of her newest book and the talk she’ll deliver at Dalhousie University Wednesday evening.

She has spent her life studying songbirds in the wild. Her first book, Silence of the Songbirds, described what she had learned about them.

Silence of the Songbirds is an intensely readable book, a finalist for the Governor General’s literary award. But the story it tells is a sad one.

Songbirds are astonishing little creatures. Many of them winter in tropical forests from Central America to mid-South America and breed in the Canadian north.

They cross the Gulf of Mexico in a sustained 15- to 20-hour overnight flight that can cost them nearly half of their body weight. At the height of the migration season in April and May, U.S. coastal radar stations pick up huge clouds of north-bound birds soon after sunset — as many as 50 million in a single night.

In the early days of radar, before operators realized what was happening, they referred to these mysterious waves of aerial movement as "storms of angels."

The destination of billions of these "neotropical migrants" is what Stutchbury calls "the biggest migratory bird nursery in the world," the vast northern boreal forest that stretches across Canada from Newfoundland to the Yukon and Alaska. Here, in a few intense summer weeks, the birds find mates and build nests, conceive, hatch and nurture their young — and then fatten themselves again for the long trip south.

The birds are at risk in every part of this demanding life cycle. Fully half of them die in the course of every year’s migration. The explosion of the human population has multiplied the hazards they confront.

Their breeding grounds in the boreal forest are being chipped away by industry. The temperate forests of eastern North America once provided a vast leafy flyway from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico but they have been reduced to fragments and the tropical forests are falling at a terrifying rate.

Lighted skyscrapers and transmission towers represent lethal obstacles to night-flying birds. Latin American farmers use staggering quantities of pesticide, with lethal effects on wintering birds. A Wisconsin study in the 1990s estimated that, in that state alone, domestic cats annually killed somewhere between eight million and 217 million birds.

And all of this is in addition to natural predators like squirrels, raccoons, snakes and other birds.

Stutchbury notes that we can all help by behaving thoughtfully — keeping our cats indoors, drinking shade-grown organic coffee, eschewing pesticide-soaked produce, buying FSC-certified lumber and paper products, dousing office lights during migration season. Most of these are better choices anyway.

Meanwhile, the annual Breeding Birds Survey shows at least 18 species of migrant songbirds in serious decline. And if you think this has nothing to do with you, think again. The songbirds are an integral part of the web of life that sustains us all.

The quality of our air, for instance, relies on healthy forests — and the trees rely on the songbirds to control their insects, pollinate their flowers and distribute their seeds and fruits.

But to value songbirds for their usefulness to humans is morally bankrupt. Songbirds are among nature’s most exquisite creations. If they don’t lift our hearts, if we can’t value them for themselves, then we have no right to share a planet with them.

In the frosty pre-dawn darkness, Bridget Stutchbury is slipping stealthily through the Pennsylvania woodlands, occasionally flashing a light to illuminate a landmark.

She is trailing a philanderer, hoping to catch the hussy in the act. For two hours she tracks her target by sound and radio — and she fails. The floozy demonstrates perfect chastity.

The philanderer is not a woman, but a bird, a female Acadian flycatcher, and Stutchbury is not a private eye, but an ornithologist who studies the social life of songbirds, including their sex lives.


Environment Canada Recognizes Local Bird Enthusiast

March 8, 2010

WINNIPEG, MANITOBA--(Marketwire - March 1, 2010) - Environment Canada recognized Manitoba resident Peter Taylor for his long-term contributions over the years as a volunteer for the Breeding Bird Survey (BBS).

Mr. Taylor has been rising in the wee hours of the morning every June to run his BBS routes since he first participated in 1978. This year, Mr. Taylor was recognized as being one of only four Canadians to have personally completed more than 100 BBS routes. The routes are pre-selected by the North American BBS and are roughly 40 km in length. Similar to a car rally, participants are required to stop at specified points for a maximum of three minutes to observe the presence or absence of birds. Their results are then submitted to the continent-wide database to help track long-term population trends for songbirds.

"I am pleased to recognize Mr. Peter Taylor's dedication to the Breeding Bird Survey, said Environment Minister Jim Prentice. Experienced volunteers, like Mr. Taylor, make a significant contribution to our understanding of the status of songbirds in Canada. The data is important to Environment Canada and other conservation agencies", said Minister Prentice.

The Breeding Bird Survey volunteers are a group of about 500 highly skilled birders. Volunteers usually have at least five years experience in bird watching, and must be able to recognize birds not only by sight, but also by song. The information collected by these volunteers across Canada contributes to the scientific data on songbird population trends. The data collected each year from the BBS is the primary source of population trend information for scientists and bird conservation planners. This work is a concrete example of what Canadians can do in terms of conservation efforts during the 2010 International Year of Biodiversity.

The North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) was initiated in 1966 in the U.S. and Canada as a means to collect long-term data on songbird population trends. It is a continental survey and is jointly coordinated by the Canadian (Environment Canada, Canadian Wildlife Service), United States (U.S. Geological Survey, Patuxtent Wildlife Research Centre) and Mexican (CONABIO) governments. Data collected from more than 3,000 BBS routes across North America are used in planning bird conservation activities in all three countries. About 500 routes are run in Canada each year.

WINNIPEG, MANITOBA--(Marketwire - March 1, 2010) - Environment Canada recognized Manitoba resident Peter Taylor for his long-term contributions over the years as a volunteer for the Breeding Bird Survey (BBS).


Climate change causes wolverine decline across Canada

Matt Walker
February 3, 2010

The wolverine, a predator renowned for its strength and tenacious character, may be slowly melting away along with the snowpack upon which it lives.

Research shows wolverine numbers are falling across North America. Their decline has been linked to less snow settling as a result of climate change.

The study is the first to show a decline in the abundance of any land species due to vanishing snowpack.

Details of the wolverine's decline are published in Population Ecology.

The wolverine lives in boreal forest across Scandinavia, northern Russia, northern China, Mongolia and North America, where it ranges mostly across six provinces or territories of western Canada.

This largest member of the weasel family eats carrion and food it hunts itself, including hares, marmots, smaller rodents and young or weakened ungulates.

It has evolved for life on the snowpack, having thick fur and outsized feet that help it move across and hunt on snow.

Striking trend

Wildlife biologist Dr Jedediah Brodie of the University of Montana, in Missoula, US, wondered how climate change might be having an impact on snowpack levels, and on the animals that depend on it.

He had previously researched how declining levels of snow in the US Yellowstone National Park, caused by climate change, was changing the abundance of aspen trees and how elk feed on them.

Dr Brodie and his colleague, Professor Eric Post of Pennsylvania State University, at University Park, US, gathered data on snowpack levels across six provinces or territories of Canada: Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, the Northwest Territories, Saskatchewan and the Yukon Territory.

In all bar the Yukon, he found that snowpack depth declined significantly between 1968 and 2004.

Other studies have shown corresponding rising temperatures and declining precipitation across much of the western US.

"It occurred to me that a good first place to look for ecological impacts of that snowpack decline would be with a snow-adapted species like the wolverine," Dr Brodie told the BBC.

"Fortuitously, Canada has good records of both snowpack trends over time as well as trends in the harvest of all sorts of fur-bearing animals."

So Dr Brodie and Professor Post examined the records of wolverine numbers caught by fur trappers over the same period.

They found a striking correlation between declining snowpack and falling numbers of the predator.

"In provinces where winter snowpack levels are declining fastest, wolverine populations tend to be declining most rapidly," the researchers wrote in the journal article.

"Spring snowpack also appears to influence wolverine population dynamics."

The researchers found only one territory, the Northwest Territories, where wolverine numbers are increasing. There, snowpack levels are declining but they remain much higher and less variable than in most other provinces.

Food scarcity

Dr Brodie cannot be sure why wolverine numbers are falling, but he has his suspicions.

"Recent work shows that wolverines appear to use areas with deep snowpack for dispersal. So reduced snowpack could make dispersal more difficult or dangerous, potentially reducing the success rate with which individuals can establish new home ranges," he says.

"Reduced snowpack may also make it harder for wolverines to get food, for several reasons.

"First, harsh winters and deep snow are major causes of mortality for ungulates like elk, moose, deer and caribou.

"If milder winters mean that fewer of these animals die over the course of the winter, then there will be fewer carcasses for wolverines to feed on," he explains.

"Wolverines also hunt rodents, and this food source may be important for wolverine reproductive success in some areas.

"But shallower snowpack is bad for a lot of rodents because it provides less insulation from the cold.

"So if declining snowpack reduces rodent abundance, that could be bad for wolverines."

Dr Brodie believes that his is the first study to show a decline in species abundance due to a reducing snowpack - for any land animal, not just those in North America.

But he says there are interesting parallels in marine systems.

"For example, sea ice is critical for polar bear foraging."

Polar bear body condition, reproductive rates, and survival have declined significantly in Hudson Bay as sea ice breaks up earlier in the spring, he says.

"At the other end of the globe, Antarctic sea ice has increased over recent decades.

"This may have negative impacts on adelie penguin populations that depend on ice-free areas for breeding and foraging.

"But we don't have to just sit back and watch climate change drive animals extinct," he says.

"As climate change worsens, we should reduce trapping levels and also disturbance to boreal forest habitats.

"Reducing the impact of these anthropogenic stressors could help 'offset' the impacts of climate change on wolverines."

The wolverine, a predator renowned for its strength and tenacious character, may be slowly melting away along with the snowpack upon which it lives.

Research shows wolverine numbers are falling across North America. Their decline has been linked to less snow settling as a result of climate change.

The study is the first to show a decline in the abundance of any land species due to vanishing snowpack.

Details of the wolverine's decline are published in Population Ecology.


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