Penticton Herald

Federal money for provincial conservati­on

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VANCOUVER (CP) — The federal government is investing $2 million over four years to support species at risk and habitat protection in southeaste­rn British Columbia.

Jonathan Wilkinson, minister of environmen­t and climate change, says the funds are from the $1.3-billion nature legacy initiative included in the 2018 federal budget.

The latest funding announceme­nt will support the work of the Kootenay Conservati­on Program to protect more than 10,000 square kilometres of wetland and other areas within four Kootenay regions.

Kootenay Connect project manager Marcy Mahr says 28 different species at risk live within the four regions; the Columbia Valley wetlands, Wycliffe wildlife corridor, Creston Valley and Bonanza biodiversi­ty corridor.

Wilkinson says the species at risk in those regions include grizzly bear, the western screech owl and the American badger.

Mahr says they’ve had success in rebuilding endangered wildlife, including the northern leopard frogs where their wetlands were being choked by vegetation.

“The frog has used these restored wetlands to breed,” says Mahr. Northern leopard frogs were once found widely across southeaste­rn B.C., but now are only confirmed to breed near Creston, she says.

“As an unexpected bonus there were even enough eggs for some to be used in the reintroduc­tion program to re-establish a population of these frogs in the Columbia wetlands, another focal area,” she says.

Wilkinson says the government is focused “the twin crises of climate change and biodiversi­ty lost,” and it remains committed to its pledge of protecting one-quarter of Canada’s marine and terrestria­l areas by 2025.

“The on-the-ground work led by the Kootenay Conservati­on program certainly showcases what we can do for Canada’s biodiversi­ty by working together.”

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