Medicine Hat News

Federal study finds Wood Buffalo Park deteriorat­ing

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An exhaustive federal study of Canada’s largest national park concludes almost every aspect of its environmen­t is deteriorat­ing.

The 561-page report on Wood Buffalo National Park says industry, dams, climate change and natural cycles are sucking the watery lifeblood from the vast delta of northeaste­rn Alberta’s Peace and Athabasca rivers.

It was prepared after concerns were raised over the park’s UNESCO World Heritage status and backs most of them up.

“The (Peace-Athabasca Delta) depends on recharge of its lakes and basins in order to retain its world heritage value,” concludes the study released to The Canadian Press.

“Currently, hydrologic recharge ... is decreasing. Without immediate interventi­on, this trend will likely continue and the world heritage values of the (delta) will be lost.”

The study looked at 17 measures of environmen­tal health, from river flows to Indigenous use. It concludes 15 are declining.

Drawing on decades of research — the report lists 50 pages of citations — the study is likely to be the most complete assessment on the region downstream of Canada’s largest energy developmen­ts and one of its biggest hydro dams.

“There’s literally hundreds of different studies going on with regard to the park or the oilsands or B.C. Hydro,” said Don Gorber, the consultant who led the effort for Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada.

“All these things are going on independen­tly. No one had put it all together.”

Gorber found major changes in the park. Behind them all is water — or the lack thereof.

Peace River flows have fallen nine per cent since the Bennett Dam was built in British Columbia. Flows from the Athabasca have declined 26 per cent. Ice jams that once flooded wetlands and isolated lakes no longer occur.

As a result, bison habitat is shrinking. Invasive species are replacing native vegetation. Migratory birds are starting to avoid areas where they once flocked in the millions.

Indigenous people who depend on boats to get to many parts of their traditiona­l territory have lost access. Trappers who used to bring in hundreds of muskrats a season now say the water-loving rodents are gone.

Others describe fish kills from stagnant, oxygenless water.

Lower water levels are concentrat­ing chemicals similar to those produced in the oilsands. Heavy metals and toxic hydrocarbo­ns are showing up in bird eggs. Mercury levels in minnows are rising.

In the skies, “both science and (Indigenous traditiona­l knowledge) have indicated a downward air-quality trend resulting from poorer air quality at certain times of the year,” the report says.

We told you so, said Melody Lepine of the Mikisew Cree, one of the First Nations whose complaints to UNESCO led to the request for the study.

“It confirms a lot of these threats, the concerns, that are causing the challenges in the delta,” she said. “It does a good job of capturing the issues in Wood Buffalo, specifical­ly in the delta.”

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