Lethbridge Herald

Project hopes to aid Selkirk caribou

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Indigenous groups on both sides of the Canadian and U.S. border are working with the British Columbia government and others to save a critically endangered species of woodland caribou.

The Kalispel Tribe in Washington state is among those leading a project building a caribou maternal pen on land owned by the Nature Conservanc­y of Canada in the mountains of B.C.’s West Kootenay.

Tribe spokesman Mike Lithgow says the eighthecta­re pen is being built where it’s expected about six south Selkirk mountain caribou will give birth later this year.

The pen is 4.57 metres high, has electric fencing on its exterior and is covered with a fabric that acts as a visual barrier for predators.

Lithgow says the cows will be caught using a net gun from a helicopter and then relocated to the pen to protect them from predators that have killed as many as three-quarters of the offspring in the past.

The tiny herd of caribou, listed as among the most endangered mammals in North America, primarily roam high-mountain, oldgrowth forests in northeaste­rn Washington state and northern Idaho.

Lithgow says they will have two shepherds with the animals during their threemonth stay in the pen. They’ll also be supplying the caribou with the lichen they usually eat, and will transition them to reindeer pellets because there isn’t enough food inside the pen.

“It’s a drastic measure. Ideally we wouldn’t be doing this of course, but with such few numbers it was really the only thing that could be agreed upon by the profession­als.”

Lithgow says the Kalispel traditiona­lly hunted the caribou and the animals are culturally significan­t to them. The tribe has been working for the last few decades to help the recovery of the herd, he says.

Lithgow says the annual cost for the three-year project is US$156,000.

The B.C. government says the pen represents one part of the recovery effort.

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